Under the adopted California Fire Code (Ord. 787), charcoal and other open-flame cooking devices generally cannot be used on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction — but one- and two-family dwellings are exempt, and small propane grills (LP-gas container 2.5 lb / 1 lb nominal or less) are excepted. In wildfire conditions the Fire Chief may restrict outdoor open-flame use.
Outdoor grilling in unincorporated Riverside County is governed by California Fire Code Section 308.1.4 (Open-flame cooking devices), adopted through Ordinance 787. The general rule: charcoal burners and other open-flame cooking devices shall not be operated on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. Two key exceptions make backyard grilling at most homes lawful: (1) one- and two-family dwellings are exempt from the 10-foot/balcony restriction, and (2) the restriction does not apply where the building, balcony, and deck are protected by an automatic sprinkler system. There is also an exception for LP-gas cooking devices having an LP-gas container with a water capacity not greater than 2.5 pounds (nominal 1-pound LP-gas capacity) — i.e., the small portable camping-style canisters. The practical effect: a homeowner at a single-family or duplex residence may use a charcoal or propane BBQ in the backyard, but residents of apartments and condominiums (Group R multi-family) generally may not operate charcoal or larger-propane grills on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of the building unless it is sprinklered. Propane cylinders used with grills are also subject to LP-gas storage rules (CFC Chapter 61). During red-flag conditions or a hazardous-fire-area closure (Ord. 787, Section 104.13), the Fire Chief can further restrict open-flame use outdoors; in high fire danger, grilling on or near dry vegetation should be avoided.
Open-flame cooking-device violations are enforced through the adopted Fire Code under Ord. 787, Section 112.4 (penalties per Riverside County Ord. 725 and HSC 17995–17995.5). Multi-family property managers are typically responsible for enforcing the balcony grill prohibition. Negligently causing a fire creates suppression cost-recovery liability under HSC 13009 (Ord. 787, Section 107.7).
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Corona, CA
Corona Municipal Code Title 6 prohibits dogs from barking, howling, or making noise that disturbs neighbors for sustained or repeated periods. Riverside Coun...
Corona, CA
Corona regulates leaf blowers under its general noise ordinance in Corona Municipal Code Chapter 9.36, restricting use during early morning, evening, and nig...
Corona, CA
Corona allows wood, vinyl, masonry block, wrought iron, tubular steel, and stucco fences in residential zones. Barbed wire, razor wire, electric fences, and ...
Corona, CA
Corona requires dogs to be on a leash no more than 6 feet long when off the owner's property, in public spaces, and in city parks. Off-leash areas are limite...
Corona, CA
Corona generally restricts chickens and livestock to agricultural and equestrian zones, with limited allowances in some single-family residential zones depen...
Corona, CA
Recreational backyard fires in Corona are allowed only in approved fire pits, chimineas, or built-in fireplaces using clean firewood, with a 25-foot clearanc...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Riverside County.
See how other cities in Riverside County handle bbq & propane rules.
See how Corona's bbq & propane rules rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.