In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, garage and yard sales are allowed as a temporary residential use under the zoning code (Ch. 13.10) without a special permit, provided they don't exceed four weekends per year at a site with a legal residential use.
Garage and yard sales in unincorporated Santa Cruz County are treated as a temporary use under the County zoning regulations in County Code Chapter 13.10. The code permits garage or yard sales not exceeding four weekends per year on the site of a legal residential use. As long as a household stays within that four-weekend annual cap and the property has an established legal residential use, no separate garage-sale permit is required from the County. This is a relatively permissive standard compared with jurisdictions that cap sales to two or three events a year or require a permit for each sale. Sellers should still observe general rules that apply to any property: temporary signs should be placed only with permission and removed promptly, sales should not create traffic, parking, or noise nuisances, and merchandise and signage should not encroach on the public right-of-way. Because the allowance is tied to a 'legal residential use,' frequent or continuous selling that effectively becomes a business may instead be treated as a home occupation or commercial use, which carries its own zoning requirements. Persistent sales beyond the four-weekend limit, or those that generate complaints, can be addressed through the County's zoning enforcement and nuisance-abatement processes. Residents with questions about whether a planned sale qualifies should contact the County Planning Department before advertising.
Exceeding four garage/yard-sale weekends per year, or running ongoing sales that amount to an unpermitted business, can be cited as a zoning violation under Chapter 13.10 and handled through County code enforcement.
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