Santa Clara County's permanent outdoor dining programs vary by city. San Jose Al Fresco transitioned pandemic parklets to a permanent program in 2024, while Palo Alto, Mountain View, and Sunnyvale operate parallel programs with separate design and permit standards.
Santa Clara County does not run a unified countywide outdoor dining program; each city manages its own. San Jose Al Fresco was made permanent in March 2024 under city ordinance, allowing restaurants to convert sidewalk and parking-stall space into outdoor seating with annual permits ($500-2,500), ABC alcohol approval, ADA-compliant access aisles, and engineered barriers. Palo Alto's California Avenue and University Avenue programs feature permanent parklet design standards. Mountain View Castro Street, Sunnyvale Murphy Avenue, and Los Gatos all run permanent outdoor dining programs. Unincorporated SCC restaurants operate under standard zoning conditional-use permits without a streamlined al fresco program. Encroachment permits, fire access lanes, and stormwater compliance apply uniformly.
Operating outdoor seating without a current permit triggers encroachment fines from $250 to $2,500 and removal orders. ABC alcohol violations in unpermitted outdoor zones can include license suspension. Repeat violators may lose their conditional use permits.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Santa Clara County.
See how Mountain View's al fresco permanent program rules stack up against other locations.
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