194 local rules on file Β· Pop. 932 Β· Orange County
Showing ordinances that apply to Silverado, CA
Silverado is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 932 in Orange County, California. Because Silverado is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Orange County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Orange County may have different rules.
Recreational fires in unincorporated Orange County are permitted in manufactured fire devices using natural gas, propane, or manufactured logs. SCAQMD No-Burn Day restrictions apply. Open fires on the ground are prohibited. Canyon communities face additional restrictions due to wildfire risk.
Orange County Fire Authority limits residential propane storage based on container size, requires setbacks from buildings and ignition sources, and bans storing more than the threshold without a permit under the California Fire Code.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Orange County ordinances.
California law requires smoke alarms in every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every floor of a home. Carbon monoxide detectors are required near bedrooms per CA Health & Safety Code 17926. Orange County Fire Authority enforces these requirements in unincorporated areas.
Orange County addresses animal hoarding through Title 4 of the Codified Ordinances and California Penal Code Section 597. OC Animal Care investigates hoarding cases involving neglect, unsanitary conditions, or animal cruelty. There is no specific countywide pet limit, but nuisance and health standards apply.
Livestock is permitted on qualifying parcels in unincorporated Orange County depending on zoning district. Agricultural and equestrian zones allow horses, goats, sheep, and other livestock with minimum lot size requirements. Canyon communities have a strong equestrian tradition.
Orange County charges substantially higher dog license fees for unaltered dogs and requires spay or neuter for impounded animals before release, encouraging sterilization and reducing shelter intake countywide.
Orange County does not require cats to be licensed but prohibits cat owners from allowing cats to become a nuisance, damage neighboring property, or run at large in restricted areas under OC Animal Care authority.
Orange County encourages residents to haze coyotes, secure attractants, and report aggressive encounters under a coordinated management plan run with OC Animal Care, OC Parks, and California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Orange County requires dogs four months and older within OC Animal Care jurisdiction to be microchipped before or at the time of license issuance, ensuring lost pets can be returned quickly to owners.
Unincorporated Orange County limits residential households to a combined number of dogs and cats over four months old, with kennel or cattery permits required for properties keeping more than the baseline allowance.
California AB 485 prohibits pet stores in Orange County from selling dogs, cats, or rabbits unless sourced from animal shelters or approved rescue organizations, and OC Animal Care inspects compliance under the state mandate.
Orange County zones veterinary hospitals into commercial and limited industrial districts and requires conditional use permits when overnight boarding, outdoor runs, or large-animal services are part of the operation.
Beekeeping in unincorporated Orange County is permitted on agriculturally zoned properties. All beekeepers must register hives with the Orange County Agricultural Commissioner and the state BeeWhere system. Residential zoning districts have limited or no allowance for apiaries.
Neither Orange County nor the state of California enforces breed-specific legislation. California Food and Agriculture Code Section 31683 prohibits breed-specific dangerous dog programs. Dogs are regulated based on individual behavior under OCCO Sections 4-1-23 and 4-1-95.
Unincorporated Orange County allows up to 4 hens on qualifying residential properties with a $57 Residential Backyard Chicken Permit effective November 2021. Roosters and other poultry are prohibited. Livestock is permitted separately on agriculturally zoned properties.
California Fish and Game Code Section 251.1 prohibits feeding wildlife as a form of harassment. While unincorporated Orange County does not have a standalone wildlife feeding ordinance, feeding coyotes and other predators may violate state law and OCCO animal nuisance provisions.
OCCO Section 4-1-45 requires all dogs to be restrained by a leash not exceeding 6 feet when off the owner's property in unincorporated Orange County. Dogs on private property must be restrained by a fence, wall, chain, or leash under the control of a competent person.
OCCO Section 4-1-94 requires a license from the OC Animal Care Director to keep any wild, exotic, dangerous, or non-domestic animal in unincorporated Orange County. Ferrets are illegal statewide in California. Keeping exotic animals must also conform to county zoning regulations.
Unincorporated Orange County regulates fences under Title 7, Division 5 (Zoning) of the Codified Ordinances. Front yard fences are limited to 42 inches, side and rear yard fences to 6 feet. Fences must not obstruct sight lines at intersections or driveways.
Orange County enforces the California Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code Β§115920-115929) and adopted Ordinance No. 19-006 requiring both primary and secondary pool barriers for all residential pools in unincorporated areas with water depth exceeding 18 inches.
OCCO Zoning Code Section 7-9-137.5 regulates fence and wall heights in unincorporated Orange County. Fences in front setback areas are limited to 3.5 feet; side and rear fences may reach 6 feet. Visibility triangles at intersections have additional restrictions.
Building permits are required for fences and walls over 6 feet in height in unincorporated Orange County. Retaining walls over 4 feet retaining level earth, or any retaining wall subject to surcharge, also require permits and engineered plans through OC Development Services.
Unincorporated Orange County prohibits barbed wire and razor wire in residential zones. Electric fences are not permitted in residential areas. Chain link fencing may be restricted in front yards. HOA CC&Rs in communities like Coto de Caza and Ladera Ranch impose additional material requirements.
Shared boundary fences in unincorporated Orange County are governed by California Civil Code Section 841, the Good Neighbor Fence Act. Adjoining property owners are presumed equally responsible for reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, and replacement of boundary fences.
Retaining walls in unincorporated Orange County require building permits and engineered plans when retaining level earth over 4 feet, retaining any slope, or subject to surcharge loads. The OC Grading Manual and Building Code govern design and construction standards.
Backyard composting is permitted and encouraged in unincorporated Orange County. California SB 1383 requires organic waste diversion statewide. OC Waste & Recycling provides composting resources and sells compost at regional landfills.
Orange County adopted its Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (WELO) on March 14, 2016, implementing California's Model WELO for all new construction and major landscape renovations in unincorporated areas. Projects must submit landscape and irrigation plans complying with state water efficiency standards.
Orange County enforces weed and vegetation abatement in unincorporated areas through the OC Agricultural Commissioner under California Health and Safety Code Sections 14875-14922. Dry weeds and grass within 100 feet of structures must be cleared as a fire and nuisance hazard.
Orange County maintains trees within public rights-of-way in unincorporated areas on a 2.5-year trimming cycle. Private property owners are responsible for maintaining trees at their own expense and must not allow trees to obstruct sidewalks, streetlights, or traffic signs.
OCCO Zoning Code Section 7-9-69 establishes the Protected Tree Ordinance for unincorporated Orange County. Protected trees with a diameter at breast height (DBH) of 5 inches or more cannot be removed without a Protected Tree Removal or Damage Permit. Replacement ratios of at least 5:1 apply.
Unincorporated Orange County regulates industrial and commercial noise under Title 4, Division 6 of the Codified Ordinances. Noise from industrial operations must not exceed established sound levels at residential property boundaries. OC Code Enforcement and OC Sheriff handle complaints.
John Wayne Airport (SNA) generates significant aircraft noise in unincorporated Orange County. The airport operates under strict departure noise limits and a voluntary nighttime curfew (11 PM to 7 AM). The County monitors noise through a permanent measurement system and maintains noise contour maps affecting residential building requirements.
Orange County Codified Ordinances Division 6 (Sections 4-6-1 through 4-6-16) regulates noise in unincorporated areas. Residential exterior noise limits are 55 dBA daytime and 50 dBA nighttime, measured at the affected property line. The entire county is designated Noise Zone 1.
OCCO Section 4-6-7(e) restricts construction noise in unincorporated areas. Noise-related construction activities are prohibited between 8 PM and 7 AM on weekdays and Saturdays, and at all times on Sundays and federal holidays.
Leaf blowers in unincorporated Orange County must comply with the general noise standards of OCCO Section 4-6-5 and are subject to California Assembly Bill 1346, which phases out gas-powered small off-road engines. The county does not have a standalone leaf blower ban, but noise limits and state emission rules effectively restrict use.
OC Animal Care enforces barking dog complaints in unincorporated areas under OCCO Sections 4-1-3 and 4-1-59. A barking dog is defined as one that barks incessantly for 30 or more minutes, or intermittently for a cumulative 60 minutes in any 24-hour period. Fines start at $250 per citation.
Unincorporated Orange County establishes decibel thresholds under Title 4, Division 6 of the Codified Ordinances. Residential zones have lower allowable noise levels than commercial or industrial zones, with separate daytime and nighttime standards.
Outdoor music in unincorporated Orange County is regulated under the general noise ordinance (Title 4, Division 6). Amplified music must not exceed decibel limits at neighboring property lines. Events at OC parks and facilities require permits that include noise conditions.
Amplified music in unincorporated Orange County is subject to a 5 dBA penalty reduction under OCCO Section 4-6-5, making the effective residential limits 50 dBA daytime and 45 dBA nighttime. Section 4-6-8 separately prohibits sound-amplifying equipment audible beyond the property of origin between 10 PM and 7 AM.
Unincorporated Orange County does not restrict short-term rentals to a host's primary residence. Investors may operate non-owner-occupied STRs in permitted zones, subject to operator permit caps, transient occupancy tax, and applicable HOA limitations.
Orange County does not impose a hosted-only requirement for short-term rentals in unincorporated areas. Owners may rent whole homes without being on-site, subject to operator permits and county nuisance, parking, and noise conditions.
Orange County does not impose a separate extended home-share category for partial-unit rentals exceeding hosted-only night caps. All short-term rentals in unincorporated areas operate under a single STR operator permit regime regardless of duration.
Orange County may revoke a short-term rental operator permit after repeated nuisance, noise, or occupancy violations at the same property. The county uses a graduated enforcement approach with warnings, fines, and ultimately permit revocation for habitual offenders.
Hosting platforms like Airbnb and VRBO are expected to display valid OC short-term rental permit numbers on listings and may face liability for facilitating unpermitted rentals in unincorporated Orange County. The county can pursue platform-level enforcement when listings lack permits.
Short-term rental operators in unincorporated Orange County must register with the OC Treasurer-Tax Collector to collect and remit the 10% Transient Occupancy Tax. A business license may be required. No separate STR-specific registration or permit program currently exists at the county level.
Unincorporated Orange County requires a Short-Term Rental (STR) permit before operating any rental of 30 days or less. The permit costs $250 and is obtained through OC Development Services. Operating without a permit triggers $1,000 per day penalties.
STR guests in unincorporated Orange County must comply with the county noise ordinance (OCCO Β§4-6-5) as a condition of the STR permit. Exterior noise limits are 55 dBA daytime (7 AMβ10 PM) and 50 dBA nighttime (10 PMβ7 AM), with STR operators responsible for guest compliance.
Unincorporated Orange County does not currently impose annual night caps on short-term rental properties. There is no county-level limit on the number of nights per year a property may be rented as an STR. Operators must comply with all other county requirements.
STR operators in unincorporated Orange County must ensure street parking remains available and limit guest vehicles. The permit conditions cap vehicles at one per one-bedroom unit or two for units with two or more bedrooms.
Unincorporated Orange County caps STR overnight occupancy at two persons per bedroom plus two additional persons. Exceeding occupancy limits is a permit violation that can lead to fines of $1,000 per day and permit revocation.
STR operators in unincorporated Orange County are required to maintain adequate liability insurance as a permit condition. The county requires proof of insurance or evidence that bookings are conducted through a platform providing equivalent liability coverage.
STR operators in unincorporated Orange County must pay a $250 permit fee and collect a 10% Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) on all rentals of 30 days or less. The TOT is administered by the OC Treasurer-Tax Collector and must be remitted to the county.
Unincorporated Orange County allows ADUs on any residentially zoned lot under OC Zoning Code (Title 7, Division 9) and California Government Code Β§65852.2 (ADUs) and Β§65852.22 (JADUs). State law preempts most local restrictions: minimum 800 sqft, 16 ft height, and 4 ft side/rear setbacks must be allowed by right.
Unincorporated Orange County allows the conversion of an existing garage, carport, or accessory structure into an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) under Section 7-9-90 of the Codified Ordinances and California Government Code Section 65852.2. A garage-conversion ADU may be the size of the converted structure plus up to 150 square feet for ingress/egress, processed ministerially, and the parking space lost in the conversion does not need to be replaced.
Carports in unincorporated Orange County are governed by Section 7-9-70.3(d) of the Codified Ordinances, which requires carports to comply with main-building setbacks and provides specific rules for entry location, alley/driveway access, and placement in rear or interior side yards. Section 7-9-70.3(c)(2) requires 28 feet of unobstructed maneuvering area in front of a carport, and each covered space must be at least 10 feet by 20 feet under Section 7-9-70.3(a)(1). Building permits are required under Title 7 (adopted CBC).
Unincorporated Orange County exempts one small detached non-habitable accessory structure - a shed - per 7,200 square feet of building site area from accessory-structure standards under Section 7-9-116.1(h)(1) of the Codified Ordinances, provided it is under 120 square feet, no taller than 8 feet, set at least 3 feet from rear and side property lines, set at least 6 feet from another building, and not located in any front yard. Sheds beyond that allowance are accessory structures regulated by Section 7-9-116.1.
OCCO Zoning Code Section 7-9-70 restricts recreational vehicle and boat parking and storage in unincorporated residential areas. RVs may only be stored on improved driveways and must not encroach into public rights-of-way or obstruct visibility at intersections.
OCCO Title 6, Division 4 and the Orange County Zoning Code restrict the parking of commercial vehicles in residential zones of unincorporated areas. Oversized commercial vehicles and equipment are generally prohibited from being stored on residential streets or properties.
Orange County adopted Ordinance No. 16-018 amending OCCO Section 7-1-25 to implement AB 1236, establishing a streamlined permitting process for electric vehicle charging stations in unincorporated areas. New construction must comply with CALGreen EV-ready parking requirements.
Abandoned vehicles in unincorporated Orange County are enforced under California Vehicle Code Sections 22523, 22651, and 22669. A vehicle parked on a public street for over 72 hours or lacking essential components may be towed immediately by the OC Sheriff.
Driveway parking in unincorporated Orange County must not obstruct sidewalks, block neighboring driveways, or extend into the public right-of-way. Vehicles must be parked on improved (paved) surfaces in residential zones per the Orange County Zoning Code.
Unincorporated Orange County follows California Vehicle Code 22651(k), which prohibits parking any vehicle on a public street for more than 72 consecutive hours. The OC Sheriff enforces overnight parking complaints in unincorporated communities through the Neighborhood Preservation program.
Street parking in unincorporated Orange County is governed by OCCO Title 6, Division 4 (Traffic Ordinances) and California Vehicle Code provisions. Vehicles may not be parked on the same public street location for more than 72 consecutive hours. The OC Sheriff enforces parking regulations.
Orange County manages coastal shoreline through OC Public Works and the California Coastal Commission. Unincorporated coastal areas require Coastal Development Permits for construction near the shoreline. Beach nourishment and erosion control projects are managed at the county level.
Orange County adopted a Climate Action Plan committing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across county facilities, fleet, and unincorporated land use, aligning with California statewide carbon-neutrality targets by 2045.
California Air Resources Board regulations limit diesel-fueled commercial vehicle idling to five minutes statewide, applying countywide in Orange County including ports, distribution centers, and school drop-off zones.
California Assembly Bill 1346 phases out the sale of new gas-powered leaf blowers and small off-road engines, applying countywide in Orange County including all 34 cities and unincorporated areas.
Orange County participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and enforces floodplain construction standards in mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas across unincorporated communities and county-administered watersheds.
California Title 24 Part 6 energy standards require cool roof reflectivity for most new and replacement low-slope roofs in Orange County's climate zones 6, 8, and 10, covering all cities and unincorporated areas.
Development within the coastal zone of unincorporated Orange County requires a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) under OCCO Β§7-9-127 and the California Coastal Act. The County has certified Local Coastal Programs for the Newport Coast, Emerald Bay, and Aliso Viejo segments, with the California Coastal Commission retaining jurisdiction over uncertified segments.
Orange County requires Erosion and Sediment Control Plans (ESCPs) for all grading and building projects in unincorporated areas. The OC Grading and Excavation Code (OCCO Title 7, Division 1, Article 8) and the NPDES MS4 permit mandate erosion prevention BMPs during construction to protect waterways and coastal resources.
Orange County enforces stormwater quality under two Phase I NPDES MS4 Permits issued by the Santa Ana and San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Boards. Title 9 of the OCCO (Water Quality) and the NPDES program require all construction and development projects in unincorporated areas to implement Best Management Practices (BMPs) and submit a Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP) before grading or building permits are issued.
The Orange County Grading and Excavation Code (OCCO Title 7, Division 1, Article 8) requires grading permits for all excavation and earthwork in unincorporated areas. Section 7-1-805 prohibits grading, clearing, brushing, or grubbing without a permit from the Building Official. Drainage facilities must conform to Subarticle 11 of the OC Grading Manual.
California does not mandate seismic gas shutoff valves for existing single-family homes. Some Orange County cities require them upon property sale. SoCalGas recommends but does not require automatic shutoff valves. Installation requires a plumbing permit.
Unincorporated Orange County does not mandate foundation bolting for existing homes. California's Earthquake Brace + Bolt (EBB) program offers grants up to $3,000 for qualifying homeowners to bolt their homes to foundations and brace cripple walls.
Unincorporated Orange County does not have a mandatory unreinforced masonry (URM) retrofit ordinance. California SB 547 required inventories of URM buildings but did not mandate retrofits. Few URM buildings exist in unincorporated OC areas due to newer construction patterns.
Orange County has not adopted a mandatory soft-story retrofit ordinance comparable to Los Angeles (Ordinance 183893) or Santa Monica (Ord. 2479CCS). Multi-family wood-frame buildings with tuck-under parking in unincorporated Orange County are governed only by the seismic provisions in the California Existing Building Code (CEBC) Chapter A4 'Earthquake Hazard Reduction for Existing Wood-Frame Residential Buildings' as adopted by the County of Orange Building Code (Codified Ordinances Title 7, Div. 1).
HOA architectural review in Orange County communities is governed by individual CC&Rs and the Davis-Stirling Act. Most large unincorporated communities require prior approval for exterior modifications. California law limits HOA authority over solar panels, drought-tolerant landscaping, EV chargers, and political signs.
HOA assessments in Orange County are governed by the Davis-Stirling Act. Regular assessments can increase up to 20% per year without member vote. Special assessments exceeding 5% of the annual budget require member approval. Delinquent assessments can result in liens and foreclosure.
CC&R enforcement in Orange County HOAs follows the Davis-Stirling Act. Violation notices must be specific and provide a hearing opportunity. Fines must follow a schedule in the operating rules. HOAs can place liens for unpaid fines but face limits on fine amounts and foreclosure authority.
HOA board procedures in Orange County are governed by the California Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civil Code 4000-6150). Board meetings must be open to members with advance notice. Elections must follow secret ballot procedures. Annual budgets and financial reports are mandatory.
HOA disputes in Orange County follow the Davis-Stirling Act's dispute resolution framework. Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) is the first step. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) must be offered before litigation. The prevailing party in HOA lawsuits may recover attorney fees.
Orange County and OCFA require automatic fire sprinkler systems in all new one and two-family dwellings under California Residential Code Section R313, with additional triggers for substantial remodels and homes in wildfire areas.
Pre-1978 homes in unincorporated Orange County must comply with federal lead disclosure for sales and rentals, and renovations disturbing painted surfaces require EPA-certified RRP contractors under California Department of Public Health oversight.
Orange County enforces the California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen) for all new construction and major remodels, requiring water efficiency, construction waste diversion, and indoor air quality measures verified at permit close-out.
Orange County zoning controls oversized homes on small lots through floor area ratio limits, height caps, and second-story setback rules in residential zones, particularly within unincorporated foothill and coastal communities.
Orange County rental and owner-occupied housing must remain free of vermin under California habitability law, with pest control work performed by Structural Pest Control Board licensed operators and tenting requiring OCFA notification.
California AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act of 2019) requires landlords countywide in Orange County to provide written notice of statewide rent caps and just-cause eviction protections, or to certify a property's exemption status, in every lease and renewal.
California AB 12 caps security deposits at one month's rent for nearly all Orange County residential tenancies starting July 2024, regardless of furnished or unfurnished status. Small mom-and-pop landlords retain a limited two-month exception.
Under California AB 1482, no-fault evictions in Orange County rental units (owner move-in, withdrawal from market, substantial remodel, government order) require landlords to provide one month's rent in relocation assistance or waive the final month's rent.
Orange County landlords using a no-fault eviction under AB 1482 must pay relocation assistance equal to one month of current rent, or waive the tenant's final month, regardless of tenant income or household size. OC has no enhanced county-level relocation tier.
California prohibits Orange County landlords from refusing to rent to applicants because they use a Section 8 housing-choice voucher or other government rental subsidy. Source-of-income protection became statewide under SB 329 in 2020.
The Orange County Housing Authority (OCHA) administers Section 8 housing-choice vouchers for most unincorporated areas and many cities. Landlords are required to accept voucher applicants under California source-of-income protection law, with OCHA setting payment standards.
California Civil Code 1940.2 prohibits Orange County landlords from using force, threats, fraud, utility cutoffs, or repeated false-eviction filings to coerce tenants into vacating. OC has not adopted a separate county-level tenant-anti-harassment ordinance like LA's TAHO.
Unincorporated Orange County has no local rent control ordinance. Tenants are protected by California's statewide Tenant Protection Act (AB 1482), which caps annual rent increases at 5% plus local CPI or 10%, whichever is lower. AB 1482 applies to most residential rental units built more than 15 years ago.
Unincorporated Orange County has no local just cause eviction ordinance. California's Tenant Protection Act (AB 1482, Civil Code Β§1946.2) provides statewide just cause eviction protections for tenants who have occupied a unit for 12 or more months. Landlords must cite a specific at-fault or no-fault reason to terminate tenancy.
Unincorporated Orange County does not require rental property registration. There is no countywide rental registry, landlord licensing, or rental inspection program for unincorporated communities. Within Orange County, only the City of Santa Ana has implemented a rental registration program as part of its Rent Stabilization Ordinance.
Orange County and its cities cannot enforce sit-lie or anti-camping ordinances against unsheltered residents when no shelter beds are available, under Martin v. Boise (9th Circuit 2018) and subsequent Ninth Circuit case law shaping county enforcement.
Orange County coordinates encampment sanitation through OC Public Works, OC Health Care Agency, and the Office of Care Coordination, providing notice, storage of personal property, and sharps and biohazard cleanup before any flood-channel or right-of-way clearing operation.
Orange County operates bridge-housing and navigation centers in Anaheim, Fullerton, Santa Ana, and Tustin to provide low-barrier short-term shelter with case management, behavioral health, and connection to permanent housing through the OC Continuum of Care system.
Orange County HCA inspects every food facility and posts a color-coded A (pass), B (conditional), or C (closed) placard at the front door, visible to customers entering.
Orange County HCA Vector Control District compels property owners to eliminate rat and mouse harborage, with mandatory abatement orders when infestations threaten neighbors or public health countywide.
California Civil Code Β§1954.603 requires Orange County landlords to provide bed bug disclosures to tenants, prohibits retaliatory eviction for reporting infestations, and mandates licensed pest treatment when found.
California Medical Waste Management Act bans household sharps in regular trash; Orange County provides free mail-back kits and drop-off sites for needles, lancets, and EpiPens.
California Health and Safety Code Β§113948 requires all OC restaurant employees handling unpackaged food to obtain an ANSI-accredited food handler card within 30 days of hire and renew every three years.
California Business and Professions Code Β§26054 bars cannabis businesses within 600 feet of schools, day cares, and youth centers; Orange County and most OC cities apply the buffer or ban cannabis outright.
Under CA Bureau of Cannabis Control Regulation Β§5416 and the 2020 Costa v. DCC ruling, licensed cannabis delivery into Orange County jurisdictions is allowed even where storefronts are banned, including all unincorporated areas.
Orange County Codified Ordinances Title 7 prohibits all commercial cannabis activity in unincorporated areas, including cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, testing, and retail storefronts under both state Prop 64 and county zoning authority.
California Proposition 64 allows adults 21+ in Orange County to grow up to six cannabis plants per private residence; outdoor cultivation may be banned locally, and OC unincorporated areas restrict cultivation to fully enclosed indoor spaces.
Orange County Ordinance No. 17-011 (codified at OCCO Β§7-9-146.8 through Β§7-9-146.14) strictly regulates personal cannabis cultivation in unincorporated areas. Indoor cultivation of up to 6 plants is permitted only within a fully enclosed and secured structure at a private residence. Outdoor personal cultivation is expressly prohibited.
All commercial cannabis operations, including dispensaries and retail sales, are prohibited in unincorporated Orange County under Ordinance No. 17-011 (OCCO Β§7-9-146.8 through Β§7-9-146.14). No cannabis dispensary, delivery service, cultivation facility, manufacturing, testing, or distribution operation may be established in any unincorporated zone.
California SB 270 and SB 1046 ban single-use plastic carryout bags at OC grocery stores, pharmacies, and large retailers; reusable or paper bags require a 10-cent minimum charge.
California SB 54 phases out expanded polystyrene foodware statewide by 2025; many OC cities including Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach, San Clemente, and Dana Point already ban EPS takeout containers, cups, and trays.
California AB 1884 prohibits OC full-service restaurants from automatically providing single-use plastic straws; customers must explicitly request one. Many OC coastal cities go further and ban plastic straws outright.
California AB 1276 requires OC food facilities to provide single-use utensils, napkins, stirrers, and condiment packets only when customers request them or affirmatively select them at self-serve kiosks.
California SB 793, affirmed by voters as Proposition 31 in 2022, bans the retail sale of flavored tobacco products including menthol cigarettes, flavored vapes, and flavored cigars throughout Orange County.
California SB 7 set the minimum tobacco purchase age at 21 in 2016, four years before federal Tobacco 21. OC retailers must check ID for any buyer who appears under 30 and face license suspension for sales to minors.
Orange County water retailers enforce outdoor irrigation schedules tied to Metropolitan Water District allocations and California state drought emergency regulations, typically limiting irrigation to specific days and hours.
Orange County water retailers operate leak hotlines and require prompt repair of customer-side leaks, with statewide California regulations also prohibiting visible water waste, runoff, and unrepaired plumbing leaks.
Orange County water retailers offer turf replacement rebates funded by Metropolitan Water District and member agencies, paying property owners per square foot of grass converted to California-friendly landscaping.
Orange County operates the world's largest potable water reuse system, the Groundwater Replenishment System, blending advanced-treated wastewater into the basin that supplies most of north and central county.
Development within Orange County's 42-mile Coastal Zone requires a Coastal Development Permit issued by the California Coastal Commission or the local jurisdiction acting under a certified Local Coastal Program.
California Government Code 65915 grants developers density bonuses, parking reductions, and concessions when projects include affordable, senior, or transitional housing units across all Orange County jurisdictions.
Orange County applies hillside management overlays in unincorporated foothills and canyon areas, restricting grading, ridgeline development, and density on slopes above defined gradients to protect viewsheds and wildfire safety.
Orange County and OCTA maintain a multi-jurisdictional bike network using California Vehicle Code Class I, II, III, and IV designations across regional trails, on-street lanes, and signed bike routes.
California Vehicle Code 312.5 defines three e-bike classes and applies countywide in Orange County, governing helmet rules, age limits, motorized speed caps, and where each class may operate.
Orange County protects coast live oak, Engelmann oak, California sycamore, and other native trees in unincorporated areas through grading, hillside, and oak woodland conservation provisions tied to CEQA review.
Unincorporated Orange County's Protected Tree Ordinance (Section 7-9-69) prohibits cutting, destroying, or removing protected trees with a trunk diameter of 5 inches or more at breast height without a Protected Tree Removal or Damage Permit from OC Development Services.
Orange County's tree ordinance provides heightened protections for Heritage Trees β mature native trees of significant size, age, or ecological value. Heritage tree removal requires a 5:1 replacement ratio by size and may cost $21,200 or more in mitigation fees.
When protected tree removal is approved in unincorporated Orange County, the ordinance requires replacement planting at a 3:1 ratio for Specimen Trees and 5:1 ratio for Heritage Trees. Developers must plant more trees than removed or pay increased mitigation fees.
Orange County has not adopted a local minimum wage, so the California statewide rate of $16.50 per hour applies to virtually all employees working in any OC city or unincorporated area as of January 2026.
California's Healthy Workplaces, Healthy Families Act guarantees at least 40 hours or 5 days of paid sick leave per year to most employees in Orange County, with no separate county or city expansion.
Senate Bill 54, the California Values Act, restricts how Orange County Sheriff and local police share information or hold individuals for federal immigration enforcement, applying countywide regardless of city policy.
Orange County does not require employers or contractors to use the federal E-Verify system, and California Assembly Bill 1065 prohibits cities and counties from forcing private employers to enroll beyond federal requirements.
Massage businesses operating in unincorporated Orange County must obtain a county business license and employ practitioners certified by the California Massage Therapy Council under state law.
Retailers selling tobacco or vape products in unincorporated Orange County must hold a state CDTFA tobacco license, and California's flavored-tobacco ban (SB 793) applies countywide regardless of any local licensing scheme.
Secondhand dealers and pawnbrokers in unincorporated Orange County must register with the OC Sheriff and report all transactions daily through the state CAPSS system to deter trafficking in stolen goods.
Tow truck operators in unincorporated Orange County must hold California Highway Patrol motor carrier permits and follow Vehicle Code Β§22658 limits on private-property trespass tows, including signage and immediate-release requirements.
Operating a commercial auto-repair business from a residence in unincorporated Orange County is prohibited; minor maintenance on personally owned vehicles is allowed within limits set by the OC Zoning Code.
Aggressive panhandling β soliciting near ATMs, in traffic medians, or with threatening conduct β is restricted in unincorporated Orange County under content-neutral safety provisions, while passive solicitation remains protected speech.
California Government Code Β§7597 bans smoking on all state beaches and parks, and OC Parks prohibits smoking and vaping in county parks; cigarettes and cannabis are restricted within 25 feet of building entrances under Labor Code Β§6404.5.
California Business & Professions Code Β§25620 prohibits possession of open alcoholic-beverage containers in public places, parks, and parking lots in unincorporated Orange County, with limited exceptions for licensed venues and designated entertainment zones.
Smoking, vaping, or ingesting cannabis in any public place, park, or vehicle on public roads is illegal in Orange County under Proposition 64 codified at Health & Safety Code Β§11362.3, even for adults 21 and over.
Vacant lots in unincorporated Orange County must be maintained free of weeds, trash, and fire hazards under the County's Weed Abatement Program (California Health & Safety Code Β§Β§14875β14922) and OCCO Title 3, Division 13 property maintenance standards. The OC Agricultural Commissioner conducts annual inspections and issues compliance notices each spring.
Orange County, California does not experience snowfall in its unincorporated communities and has no snow removal or sidewalk snow-clearing ordinance. Coastal and inland Southern California climate means this regulation is not applicable. Standard sidewalk maintenance falls under general property maintenance provisions.
OCCO Title 3, Division 13 (Property Maintenance) establishes comprehensive standards for property upkeep in unincorporated Orange County. Article 1 prohibits junk and debris accumulation, inoperable vehicles, substandard housing, lawn parking, polluted pools, and garage conversions to living space. OC Development Services Neighborhood Preservation enforces these standards.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors regulates yard sales on private property in unincorporated areas. Residents may hold yard sales on the last full weekend of each month without registration, plus two additional registered sales per year. Only secondhand personal property may be sold, and sales must occur in front and side yards of properties with residences.
Trash can placement in unincorporated Orange County is regulated under OCCO Title 4 (Solid Waste), Division 3, Article 2. Trash bins left at curbside outside of collection windows are a listed common code violation. OC Waste & Recycling and OC Development Services enforce proper bin storage and placement requirements.
Orange County's Neighborhood Preservation division handles code enforcement for unincorporated areas. Reports can be filed 24/7 through the myOCeServices portal, by phone at 714-667-8853, or by email. The program is complaint-driven, with investigations only opening when the county receives a complaint.
Orange County Neighborhood Preservation investigates complaints based on priority. Safety hazards receive expedited response. Routine complaints are typically investigated within 2-4 weeks. The county focuses on voluntary compliance before pursuing administrative citations.
Common violations in unincorporated Orange County include unpermitted construction, property maintenance issues, illegal front yard fences (chain-link in front), abandoned vehicles, illegal signs, commercial activity in residential zones, and overgrown vegetation.
California's noxious weed list applies in Orange County. The OC Agricultural Commissioner enforces plant quarantines and pest regulations. The county's Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance requires new landscaping to use drought-tolerant species.
Orange County does not have a bamboo ban or containment ordinance. Running bamboo that spreads to neighboring properties may create civil liability under California nuisance law. Clumping bamboo is popular in OC landscaping and is unrestricted.
Front yard vegetable gardens are allowed in unincorporated Orange County under California AB 2561 (2022). The county encourages drought-tolerant landscaping and does not prohibit food production in residential yards. HOAs may have separate landscaping requirements.
Residential security cameras are permitted in unincorporated Orange County. California is a two-party consent state for audio recording (Penal Code 632). Video-only surveillance of your own property is generally unrestricted. Cameras should not be directed to capture areas where neighbors have a reasonable expectation of privacy.
California is a two-party (all-party) consent state for recording confidential conversations under Penal Code 632. Recording a conversation without all parties' consent is a criminal offense. Video recording without audio in public or on your property is generally permitted.
In unincorporated Orange County, fences up to 6 feet are generally allowed in side and rear yards. Front yard fences and walls are limited to 3.5 feet within visibility triangles. Chain-link fences are not allowed in front setback areas.
In unincorporated Orange County, one-story detached sheds under 120 square feet are exempt from building permits. Larger sheds require permits. All sheds must comply with zoning setbacks, lot coverage, and fire-zone requirements.
Fences under 6 feet do not require building permits in unincorporated Orange County if they comply with zoning requirements. Front setback fences have a 3.5 foot limit. No chain-link in front. Fences over 6 feet and retaining walls over 4 feet require permits.
Most renovation work in unincorporated Orange County requires building permits. Structural, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and roofing work all need permits. Cosmetic work does not. Apply through OC Development Services.
Decks not more than 30 inches above grade are exempt from building permits in Orange County. Elevated decks, covered patios, and attached patio covers require permits. At-grade patios generally do not require permits.
Orange County's curfew ordinance under Title 3, Division 6, Article 1 prohibits minors under 18 from being in public places during nighttime hours β 10:00 PM to 6:00 AM on weekdays and 11:00 PM to 6:00 AM on weekends β with exceptions for work, emergencies, and supervised activities.
OC Parks enforces seasonal operating hours at all county regional parks and beaches, generally 6:00 AM to 9:00 PM during spring/summer and 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM in fall/winter. County beaches close at 10:00 PM year-round. Presence after hours is prohibited.
Orange County prohibits operation of drones and radio-controlled devices in all county parks, beaches, and recreational areas under Section 2-5-42 of the Codified Ordinances except in designated areas approved by the Director. FAA rules including TRUST certification also apply.
Commercial drone operations in unincorporated Orange County require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. County parks remain off-limits for commercial flights without Director approval. LAANC authorization is required near John Wayne Airport's controlled airspace.
Political and noncommercial signs in unincorporated Orange County are regulated under the County Zoning Code and must comply with temporary sign provisions. Political signs may be displayed up to 90 days before an election and must be removed within 10 days after the election. Signs not removed may be taken down by enforcement officers without notice.
Orange County does not have a specific ordinance restricting residential holiday displays in unincorporated areas. Holiday decorations and seasonal displays on private property are generally permitted without a permit. Standard nuisance provisions under OCCO Title 3 and noise/lighting standards apply if displays create a disturbance.
Garage sale and yard sale signs in unincorporated Orange County are regulated as temporary signs under the Zoning Code. Signs directing traffic to yard sales may not be placed on public property, utility poles, or rights-of-way. The County's yard sale ordinance permits sales on the last full weekend of each month without registration, plus two additional registered sales per year.
Solar panel installations in unincorporated Orange County require a building permit from OC Development Services. The County participates in SolarAPP+ for streamlined instant permitting of qualifying residential rooftop solar systems. Standard plan review for non-qualifying systems takes 2-4 weeks.
California's Solar Rights Act (Civil Code Β§714) provides strong protections for homeowners installing solar panels in unincorporated Orange County. HOAs cannot prohibit solar installations or impose restrictions that increase system cost by more than $1,000. Unreasonable aesthetic requirements that significantly reduce system efficiency are void and unenforceable.
Solicitors in unincorporated Orange County must respect posted no-soliciting signs on residential properties. The county's business licensing ordinance and California Penal Code Section 602 protect residents from unwanted door-to-door solicitation.
Door-to-door solicitors and peddlers operating in unincorporated Orange County must obtain a business license through the Orange County Sheriff's Department. The Sheriff's Business Licensing unit processes permits for canvassers, solicitors, and peddlers in unincorporated areas.
Unincorporated Orange County does not impose a specific numerical limit on garage sale frequency in its codified ordinances. However, conducting frequent or continuous sales may trigger zoning enforcement for operating a commercial business from a residential property.
Unincorporated Orange County does not require a formal permit for residential garage or yard sales. However, sales must comply with county property maintenance and signage codes. California CDTFA requires a temporary seller's permit if sales exceed occasional personal property disposal.
Unincorporated Orange County does not have a dedicated dark sky ordinance. General outdoor lighting standards are addressed through the Orange County Zoning Code development standards and the California Building Energy Efficiency Standards (Title 24). Lighting for new development must comply with glare and light spillage provisions in project-specific conditions of approval.
Unincorporated Orange County addresses light trespass through general nuisance provisions under OCCO Title 3 and project-specific conditions of approval under the Zoning Code. While there is no standalone light trespass ordinance, excessive artificial lighting that spills onto neighboring residential properties can be addressed as a nuisance through code enforcement.
Unincorporated Orange County uses franchise haulers (Waste Management, CR&R, Republic Services) assigned by community. Residents must use a three-container system with color-coded lids for trash, recyclables, and organics under SB 1383 mandates effective January 2022.
Residents in unincorporated Orange County must place bins curbside with wheels against the curb by 6:00 AM on collection day. Carts should be spaced approximately one foot apart and at least three feet from obstructions like parked cars, fire hydrants, and trees.
Unincorporated Orange County residents receive two free bulky-item pickups per year through their franchise hauler, with up to four items collected per pickup. Items must weigh under 150 pounds. Household hazardous waste is accepted free at four county collection centers.
Under SB 1383, all unincorporated Orange County residents must separate organic waste, recyclables, and landfill-bound trash using a mandatory three-container system with color-coded lids. Opting out is not permitted under state law, and enforcement began January 2024.
The Orange County Zoning Code limits fence and wall heights to 3.5 feet in front setback areas and 6 feet in side and rear setback areas. Primary residential structures in most zones are limited to 35 feet. The code includes specific visibility triangle requirements at intersections.
Orange County's zoning code limits lot coverage in residential zones to ensure adequate open space. Development standards tables in the zoning code specify maximum building coverage percentages that vary by zoning district, with most single-family zones around 40-50% maximum coverage.
Unincorporated Orange County's zoning code under Title 7, Division 9 establishes setback requirements for all residential zones. The R-1 Single Family Residence district requires a 25-foot front setback, 25-foot rear setback, and 6-foot interior side setbacks for lots platted prior to March 3, 1997.
All food trucks operating in Orange County must obtain an OC Environmental Health permit. Permits from other California counties do not transfer. First-time applicants must submit vehicle construction plans for review and use a county-approved commissary.
OC Environmental Health permits do not restrict where food trucks can operate, but local zoning rules apply. In unincorporated Orange County, vendors must check OC Planning zoning requirements. California SB 972 protects sidewalk vending rights statewide.