Backyard smokers (wood, pellet, charcoal, or propane) are allowed in unincorporated Tulare County for home cooking with no special permit. They are treated as cooking devices under the adopted 2022 California Fire Code, not as open burning, so the trash-burning prohibition does not apply. Keep them clear of combustibles and watch for smoke-nuisance and wildfire-season restrictions.
There is no specific Tulare County ordinance for backyard smokers; they are regulated as outdoor cooking appliances under the adopted 2022 California Fire Code (Ordinance Code Section 7-15-1115, enforced by the Tulare County Fire Chief). Because a smoker is a cooking device using clean fuel (seasoned wood, lump charcoal, pellets, or propane) rather than burning waste, it is not 'open burning' and is not barred by the county's trash/rubbish-burning prohibition in Code Section 7-15-1130(f). Like barbecue grills, smokers fall outside the 'recreational fire' definition, so the 25-foot recreational-fire setback does not apply; nonetheless, a smoker should be positioned a safe distance from the house, fence, eaves, and other combustibles and never left unattended. At multi-family (Group R) buildings, adopted Fire Code Section 308 restrictions on open-flame and charcoal cooking devices on combustible balconies apply. Smoke from a smoker that drifts onto neighbors could be addressed as a public nuisance under general county nuisance provisions if persistent and unreasonable. In the foothill State Responsibility Area, CAL FIRE open-flame restrictions during high fire danger may temporarily limit wood or charcoal smokers; confirm current rules before use.
There is no smoker-specific penalty. Using a smoker in a prohibited multi-family location, or in a way that violates the adopted Fire Code or wildfire-season open-flame restrictions, is an infraction under Code Section 7-15 (penalty per Code Section 125). Persistent smoke affecting neighbors could be pursued as a nuisance; an escaped fire creates liability under Health & Safety Code 13009.
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