Unincorporated Amador County has no standalone STR parking rule, but the zoning code sets off-street parking for transient lodging approved by use permit. Under Code Chapter 19.48, detached room units used for short-term lodging require at least one off-street parking space per unit, and bed-and-breakfast use permits include off-street parking conditions.
Off-street parking for vacation rentals in unincorporated Amador County is governed through the zoning use permit rather than a dedicated short-term-rental ordinance. Under Code Chapter 19.48, the detached-room-unit pathway requires a minimum of one off-street parking space for each unit; combined with the cap of five detached room units per parcel, this sets a baseline of at least one space per rentable unit plus the owner or manager's own parking. For a bed-and-breakfast inn approved in an existing dwelling, the Planning Commission imposes off-street parking as part of the conditions of approval, typically scaled to the number of guest rooms plus the resident owner or manager; the exact requirement is set on the permit. Because much of the unincorporated County is rural - the Shenandoah Valley wine area near Plymouth and Fiddletown, the foothill communities, and the Kirkwood corridor - parcels generally have room for on-site parking, but the County still requires that guest parking be accommodated off the public road as a permit condition. Guest vehicles spilling onto narrow rural or mountain roads can also raise fire-access and general traffic-safety concerns enforced under other County provisions. Operators should confirm the specific number of required off-street spaces for their parcel and use type with Amador County Planning when applying for the use permit, and provide clearly marked on-site parking to avoid neighbor complaints and code enforcement.
Failing to provide the off-street parking required by a Chapter 19.48 use permit - at least one space per detached room unit, or the spaces required as B&B permit conditions - can block or jeopardize the permit and lead to zoning code-enforcement action. Guest vehicles blocking rural roads or fire access can draw separate enforcement under County traffic and fire-safety rules.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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California's SB 1383 requires organic-waste (food scraps and yard trimmings) diversion statewide, including unincorporated Amador County, though rural and lo...
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Unincorporated Amador County has no ordinance banning artificial turf, and the county does not impose a special synthetic-turf permit for residential yards. ...
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Unincorporated Amador County does not require native or drought-tolerant plantings for ordinary homeowners, nor does it ban them. State law (Civil Code 4735)...
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Capturing rooftop rainwater is legal across California, including unincorporated Amador County. Under the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012, rooftop rainwater ca...
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Unincorporated Amador County does not impose its own day-of-week watering schedule. Outdoor water use is governed by statewide State Water Resources Control ...
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Amador County Code Chapter 7.30 declares all hazardous vegetation and combustible material on improved parcels in the unincorporated county a public nuisance...
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