Unincorporated San Bernardino County requires weeds and grasses to be kept below four inches at all times under the Fire Hazard Abatement Program (County Code 23.0301-23.0319). Owners must also remove dead vegetation and combustible debris and clear flammable vegetation near structures. Non-compliant parcels are abated by the County at the owner's expense.
San Bernardino County's Fire Hazard Abatement Program, administered by Land Use Services Code Enforcement under County Code Sections 23.0301-23.0319, sets the weed-and-grass standard for unincorporated parcels: weeds and grasses must be kept below four inches at all times. Owners must also remove dead trees, dead plants, and combustible debris that could spread fire to homes. County guidance directs that flammable vegetation within 30 feet of any structure, and 10 feet from a roadway or driveway, be cleared, and the program references maintaining 100 feet of defensible space around structures. The duty to abate falls on every owner and person in control of the land and extends to adjoining sidewalks, parkways, and easements. Seasonal inspections start in spring; first and second inspections are documented with photos. If a hazard is found, the County issues a Notice and Order to Abate giving roughly a 30-day grace period to comply, with an additional short window after a Notice of Intent to Abate to submit photographic evidence of clearance. If the owner does not act, the County abates the hazard and bills the owner. Published fees include a $100 administrative citation, a $100 appeal fee (refunded if successful), warrant ($298.00), late ($123.00) and lien ($211.00) fees, and abatement labor up to a maximum of $627.00 per hour plus a $76.00 administrative fee.
Weeds/grasses over four inches or uncleared combustible vegetation can trigger a Notice and Order to Abate (about 30 days to comply). The County can then clear the property and bill the owner, with late and lien fees on unpaid charges.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
San Bernardino County, CA
Motor-vehicle noise on roads in unincorporated San Bernardino County is governed mainly by the California Vehicle Code, which the state controls: every vehic...
San Bernardino County, CA
Curb colors in unincorporated San Bernardino County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458, which defines red (no stopping), yellow (freight/passenger ...
San Bernardino County, CA
San Bernardino County Development Code Section 83.11.090 requires off-street loading spaces for institutional, commercial, industrial and special uses. Each ...
San Bernardino County, CA
Unincorporated San Bernardino County does not have a single dedicated 'oversized vehicle' street ordinance. Large and heavy vehicles are instead controlled b...
San Bernardino County, CA
The County Development Code dictates both permitted and prohibited fence materials in the unincorporated area. Required separation and right-of-way walls mus...
San Bernardino County, CA
Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged in unincorporated San Bernardino County. Under California's SB 1383, residents in the mandatory-collection area...
See how San Bernardino County's weeds & overgrown grass rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.