Unincorporated Solano County reviews on-site parking as part of the Vacation House Rental permit, and the County's published FAQ confirms hosts are asked about providing on-site parking. There is no single countywide numeric space requirement published in the VHR program materials reviewed; parking is set through the discretionary permit and Chapter 28 standards.
Parking for short-term rentals in unincorporated Solano County is handled through the land-use permit rather than a flat published space-per-bedroom rule. The County's Vacation House Rental FAQ expressly includes the question 'Are hosts required to provide on-site parking?', confirming that on-site parking is a reviewed element of the VHR program, but the specific numeric standard is set by the Planning Division when it conditions the Administrative Permit (hosted rental) or Minor Use Permit (VHR). General off-street parking standards in Chapter 28, Article IV of the Solano County Code (site development and other standards) supply the baseline that planners apply, and the permit conditions translate those standards to the individual property based on bedroom count, road access, and septic capacity. Because many unincorporated parcels are rural and on private roads, planners weigh whether guest vehicles can be accommodated on-site without spilling onto narrow roads or shoulders. To confirm the exact number of spaces required for a specific property, operators should consult Planning Services or the conditions printed on their issued permit; the County did not publish a single fixed figure in the VHR overview pages reviewed here, so we do not assert one.
Failing to provide the on-site parking required by the permit conditions, or allowing guest vehicles to obstruct private roads or neighboring property, is a permit and code violation that can prompt complaints, citations, and permit review.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Solano County, CA
Solano County allows standard fence materials for residential lots without a general material ban. Section 28.94.I requires a solid wall or fence approved by...
Solano County, CA
Beyond height, Solano County's Zoning Code requires screening fences in certain situations. Section 28.94.I requires a minimum six-foot-high solid wall or fe...
Solano County, CA
In unincorporated Solano County, retaining walls not over 4 feet in height, measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall, are exempt from a...
Solano County, CA
Solano County's Zoning Code (Chapter 28) sets fence height and placement, but cost-sharing and disputes over boundary fences are governed by California Civil...
Solano County, CA
Solano County Code Chapter 4 has no provision using the term 'hoarding,' but it addresses the underlying conditions: it bars keeping animals in numbers or co...
Solano County, CA
Solano County Code Chapter 4 contains no general ordinance prohibiting the feeding of wild animals such as deer, coyotes, or raccoons in unincorporated areas...
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