Unincorporated Santa Barbara County does not have a dedicated countywide garage-sale permit ordinance in its Land Use & Development Code. Occasional residential yard sales are generally treated as an accessory residential activity, but sales must not become a continuing retail business, which the zoning code does not allow in residential zones.
Research of the Santa Barbara County Land Use & Development Code (Chapter 35) and County waste materials did not locate a specific countywide garage-sale or yard-sale permit ordinance for unincorporated areas, unlike some California cities that cap the number of sales per year. As a result, occasional residential garage and yard sales are generally understood to be an accidental, accessory residential activity rather than a permitted commercial 'retail sales' land use. The key zoning principle is that residential zones do not allow ongoing commercial retail use of a dwelling; the LUDC's home-occupation standards (Section 35.42.190) and zoning use tables draw a clear line between residential use and business activity. A genuinely occasional yard sale of a household's own used goods is not the same as running a store, but repeated or continuous sales, sales of goods bought for resale, or a sale that creates traffic, parking, signage, or nuisance impacts can cross into an unpermitted commercial use that Code Compliance can address. Temporary off-site directional signs in the public right-of-way may also be regulated by the County's sign rules and Public Works. Because the County publishes no specific garage-sale frequency limit, residents in unincorporated areas should keep sales infrequent and short, avoid permanent signage, and contact Planning & Development if they are unsure whether a planned sale could be treated as a business. Incorporated cities may have their own garage-sale ordinances.
A truly occasional residential yard sale is generally not a violation. However, frequent or continuous sales, reselling purchased merchandise, or sales causing traffic, parking, or signage problems can be treated as an unpermitted commercial use in a residential zone and addressed by Code Compliance through notices of violation and administrative fines under Chapter 24A.
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