Outdoor cooking with BBQ grills and propane is generally allowed at residences in unincorporated San Mateo County and is not restricted by the open-burning or Spare the Air wood rules. The California Fire Code regulates where open-flame and LP-gas grills may be used near combustibles and on multifamily balconies.
Cooking on a residential barbecue is broadly permitted in unincorporated San Mateo County. The California Fire Code (section 307.6) expressly states that exterior barbecue or fuel-burning devices intended for cooking are not restricted as 'open burning,' so a backyard BBQ does not require a burn permit. Likewise, the BAAQMD wood-burning ban (Regulation 6, Rule 3) targets wood-burning devices and fire pits, not cooking on a grill, and gas/propane appliances are exempt from the Spare the Air wood ban. The main restrictions come from the California Fire Code's open-flame rules for multifamily and combustible settings: California Fire Code section 308 generally prohibits the use or storage of open-flame cooking devices and LP-gas grills (and the storage of LP-gas containers larger than 1 pound) on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at apartments and condominiums (Group R occupancies), with exceptions for one- and two-family dwellings and where the building is protected by an automatic sprinkler system. Propane cylinders themselves are governed by California Fire Code Chapter 61 / NFPA 58: 20-lb BBQ cylinders should be stored outdoors and kept away from heat and ignition sources. In Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones, charcoal and open-flame grilling may be further restricted during red-flag / high fire danger periods at CAL FIRE's direction. Electric and gas grills are the safest options during fire season.
Improper use of open-flame or LP-gas grills on a combustible apartment/condo balcony violates California Fire Code section 308 and is enforced by the San Mateo County Fire Marshal / CAL FIRE, who may order removal of the device and cite the responsible party. Using grills during a CAL FIRE burn suspension in high fire danger areas may also be cited. There is no general permit or fee for residential single-family barbecuing. Questions: San Mateo County Fire Marshal, (650) 573-3846.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Daly City, CA
Daly City operates a residential preferential parking permit program under Municipal Code Chapter 10.40 in four zones near transit hubs (Zones A-D, including...
Daly City, CA
Daly City does not require fences to be set back from interior property lines, but fences in the front yard need City approval for visibility and utility cle...
Daly City, CA
Daly City's fence ordinance imposes no general material prohibitions on residential fences. Material rules apply only in special cases: 10-foot fences on non...
Daly City, CA
Daly City does not require all pets to be sterilized, but Municipal Code Section 6.04.280 charges a refundable $100 spay/neuter fee to redeem any impounded u...
Daly City, CA
No Daly City ordinance sets a fixed numeric limit on the number of dogs or cats per household. Under the countywide San Mateo County animal control program t...
Daly City, CA
Daly City Municipal Code Section 6.04.060 requires any animal on a public street, sidewalk, park, school ground, or other public or unenclosed property to be...
See how Daly City's bbq & propane rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.