In unincorporated Sacramento County, the California Fire Code governs outdoor cooking. Section 308.1.4 prohibits operating charcoal burners and other open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. One- and two-family dwellings and fully sprinklered buildings are exempt, so most single-family backyard grilling is unaffected.
Backyard and balcony grilling in unincorporated Sacramento County is governed by the adopted California Fire Code rather than a unique county BBQ ordinance. California Fire Code Section 308.1.4 provides that charcoal burners and other open-flame cooking devices shall not be operated on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. The practical effect is on apartments, condos, and multi-family buildings with wood or vinyl balconies, where charcoal and many open-flame propane grills cannot be operated unless 10 feet of clearance from combustible construction is achieved. Important exceptions: the rule does not apply to one- and two-family dwellings (single-family homes and duplexes), and it does not apply where the building, balconies, and decks are protected by an automatic sprinkler system, or where the balcony and adjacent walls are of noncombustible construction. So a homeowner grilling on a single-family patio is generally fine, while an apartment tenant on a combustible balcony is restricted. For the LP-gas supply itself, California Fire Code Chapter 61 generally allows a residential cooking device with a small cylinder (a nominal 1-pound capacity / about 2.5 pounds water capacity for a self-contained device), and standard grill tanks should be stored outdoors, not inside. Many apartment communities adopt stricter house rules than the code minimum, and during fire season or Red Flag Warnings local fire authorities may impose additional restrictions on open flames.
Operating a charcoal or open-flame grill on a combustible balcony or within 10 feet of combustible construction, where the exceptions do not apply, is a California Fire Code violation enforceable by the local fire agency (typically Sacramento Metro Fire), which can order the device removed or its use stopped and may cite the responsible party under the adopted fire code's penalty provisions. Property managers can be cited for allowing prohibited grilling on combustible balconies.
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