For new construction in unincorporated San Mateo County, the County's local amendments to the California Building and Energy Codes require EV charging infrastructure. Adopted February 25, 2020 and effective for permits, the rules require commercial buildings (excluding office) to install Level 2 EV charging at 6% of parking spaces and Level 1 circuits at 5%. Residents apply for EV charger permits through County Planning and Building.
Unincorporated San Mateo County requires electric-vehicle charging readiness in new buildings through local amendments to the California Building Standards Code (Title 24), which the County adopted on February 25, 2020 and which apply only to construction in the unincorporated County. The amendments require all-electric buildings, solar installation for multifamily and commercial buildings, and increased levels of EV charging infrastructure for all building types. For commercial buildings other than office uses, the local code requires installation of Level 2 EV charging stations at 6% of parking spaces and Level 1 circuits at an additional 5% of parking spaces, with credit available for installing DC fast chargers; these requirements apply to newly constructed, ground-up buildings and not to additions or remodels. Off-street, EV, ADA, and bicycle parking requirements for a given project vary by location and zoning under the Title 8 Development Code. For installing a home or business charger, unincorporated County residents and businesses apply for an electric-vehicle charging-station permit through the County Department of Planning and Building, and the County's Sustainability program provides additional guidance and incentives. Because these standards are tied to building permits and zoning, anyone planning a charger installation or a new development should confirm current requirements with Planning and Building before applying.
Failing to provide the required EV charging infrastructure in a covered new construction project, or installing a charging station without the required County permit, can hold up plan approval or inspection sign-off. The EV-readiness mandates apply to new ground-up buildings, not to remodels or additions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
South San Francisco, CA
South San Francisco regulates noise under SSFMC Chapter 8.32 (Noise Regulations). The ordinance prohibits loud, unnecessary noise disturbing neighborhood pea...
South San Francisco, CA
South San Francisco prohibits nuisance barking under the general noise ordinance (SSFMC Ch. 8.32). Animal control in SSF is provided by Peninsula Humane Soci...
South San Francisco, CA
South San Francisco permits construction with a valid city permit weekdays 8 AM–8 PM, Saturdays 9 AM–8 PM, and Sundays/holidays 10 AM–6 PM. Equipment noise c...
South San Francisco, CA
Fence cost sharing between neighbors in South San Francisco is governed by California Civil Code §841 (Good Neighbor Fence Act). Written notice of 30 days is...
South San Francisco, CA
Standard residential fences within height limits in South San Francisco generally do not require a building permit. Fences over 6 feet, masonry fences, or fe...
South San Francisco, CA
South San Francisco fence heights are governed by SSFMC Title 20 (Zoning Code). Standard residential limits are 3–4 ft in front yards and up to 6 ft in side/...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in San Mateo County.
See how other cities in San Mateo County handle ev charging.
See how South San Francisco's ev charging rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.