Outdoor smokers in unincorporated Orange County are treated as cooking devices under the California Fire Code (enforced by OCFA), not as recreational fires. At single-family homes they are generally allowed; at apartments/condos/townhomes, charcoal and other open-flame smokers are banned on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction unless the building is sprinklered.
Charcoal, pellet, and wood smokers used for outdoor cooking fall under the California Fire Code's cooking-device provisions, enforced by OCFA, rather than the open-burning or recreational-fire rules (which target fires for warmth or disposal). At one- and two-family dwellings, smokers are generally permitted, provided they are used safely, kept away from combustible vegetation and structures, and operated per manufacturer instructions. The significant restriction applies at multifamily occupancies: the Fire Code prohibits charcoal burners and other open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at apartments, condominiums, and townhomes (all R occupancies except one- and two-family dwellings), unless the building or balcony is protected by an automatic sprinkler system. Because smokers produce sustained heat and embers over long cook times, owners in the high-fire-hazard canyon communities (Silverado, Modjeska, Trabuco) should exercise particular caution, and OCFA's fire-weather restrictions on open flame can apply during Red Flag conditions and very low humidity. A propane- or pellet-fueled smoker is not a wood-burning device for AQMD purposes, so it is not restricted by 'Check Before You Burn' no-burn days; a charcoal or stick-burning smoker still produces smoke and should be used considerately.
Smoker violations at multifamily properties are enforced by OCFA under the California Fire Code, which prohibits open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies; the fire code official may order removal and issue notices of violation. At single-family homes, an unsafe smoker that ignites vegetation or creates a hazard can trigger fire-code enforcement, and nuisance-smoke complaints may be addressed through county code enforcement.
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