On county roads, painted curbs set parking rights under Traffic Ordinance Sec. 7200: red means no stopping, standing, or parking at any time; green allows 24 minutes (8 a.m.-6 p.m.); yellow is for loading; white is for brief passenger loading or mail. Only authorized curb markings made under ordinance or resolution are enforceable.
Curb colors on county-maintained roads in unincorporated Ventura County carry legal meaning under the Traffic Ordinance, Division 7, Chapter 1. Section 7200 (Parking restrictions) defines the curb-color scheme: in a red zone it is unlawful to stop, stand, or park at any time, except that buses may stop in a red zone also marked as a bus loading zone; in a green zone it is unlawful to park more than 24 minutes between 8:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. except Sundays and holidays; in a yellow zone stopping, standing, or parking is limited to short loading periods (up to three minutes for passengers and up to two hours for freight, 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.); and in a white zone, only brief stops (about three minutes) to load or unload passengers or deposit mail are allowed. Section 7220 (Prohibited parking) confirms that curb markings are enforceable when established by ordinance or resolution of the Board of Supervisors with proper signs or markings giving notice. Because these colors derive their force from the County ordinance and the Vehicle Code, private parties may not paint curbs to create their own restrictions; curb markings on county roads are placed by the County. The same color meanings broadly mirror California Vehicle Code curb-color conventions.
Parking against an official curb color in violation of its meaning (for example, stopping in a red zone, overstaying a green-zone 24-minute limit, or sitting in a yellow or white loading zone past the allowed time) is a parking violation under Sec. 7200/7220. Unauthorized painting of curbs by private parties is not an enforceable restriction.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Ventura County, CA
Outdoor music at homes in unincorporated Ventura County is limited at night by Ordinance No. 4124, which bars amplified or instrumental sound audible 50 feet...
Ventura County, CA
Ventura County's nighttime noise ordinance uses an audibility-at-50-feet test rather than a decibel number. Numeric dBA limits come from the General Plan's n...
Ventura County, CA
Ventura County's ordinance distinguishes solid from see-through fencing, allowing taller see-through fences in setbacks. Barbed wire, razor wire, and electri...
Ventura County, CA
Beyond height, Ventura County's ordinance regulates fence placement near streets and driveways, vehicle gate setbacks, clear sight triangles, and how fence h...
Ventura County, CA
California has no statewide cat leash law and no flat statewide cat limit. In unincorporated Ventura County, cats are treated as 'pet animals' under the zoni...
Ventura County, CA
Unincorporated Ventura County does not set a single flat cap on dogs or cats; the number of 'pet animals' allowed is calculated by zone and lot size under th...
See how Ventura County's curb color rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.