Unincorporated Placer County does not publish a dedicated garage-sale permit ordinance. Occasional residential yard sales are generally treated as a temporary use rather than a regulated business. Temporary uses and events are addressed in the County Zoning Ordinance (Section 17.56.300), and home-based commerce is limited by the home-occupation rules (Section 17.56.120).
Placer County's Zoning Ordinance (Chapter 17 of the County Code) does not contain a separate garage-sale or yard-sale permit chapter that we located, and the county does not advertise a garage-sale permit program for the unincorporated area. Occasional residential garage or yard sales are generally understood as an incidental, temporary residential activity rather than a commercial business requiring a license. The closest governing provisions are the Temporary Uses and Events standards in Section 17.56.300 and the Home Occupations standards in Section 17.56.120 of the Zoning Ordinance, which limit ongoing commercial activity conducted from a residence. Frequent or continuous sales could cross the line into a home occupation or unpermitted commercial use, which would be subject to zoning enforcement and the general nuisance provisions of County Code Chapter 8. Because the rules are not garage-sale-specific, residents planning recurring sales should confirm current requirements with Placer County Planning Services (Auburn 530-745-3000; Tahoe City 530-581-6200). Note that incorporated cities within Placer County (for example, Roseville, Rocklin, and Lincoln) may impose their own garage-sale permit or frequency limits in their municipal codes, so the unincorporated-county treatment described here does not apply inside city limits.
There is no garage-sale-specific penalty in unincorporated Placer County. However, turning a residence into a continuous retail operation can be cited as an unpermitted home occupation or commercial use under the Zoning Ordinance, with enforcement through Code Compliance.
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