Swimming pool permit rules in Santa Cruz County, CA — also covering above-ground pools, in-ground pools, and spa installations — set fencing, barrier, alarm, and inspection requirements.
In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, installing or altering a swimming pool, in-ground spa, or hot tub requires a building permit and engineered plans meeting current California codes and County Code Section 12.10.216. A spa or hot tub holding water over 18 inches deep is treated as a swimming pool.
The County of Santa Cruz Community Development & Infrastructure (CDI) department requires a building permit for the installation or alteration of any swimming pool, in-ground spa, hot tub, or pool enclosure. Per the County's IB-282 form, plans must be drawn to a scale of not less than 1/8 inch per foot and, for pools and in-ground spas, must be stamped and wet-signed by a California licensed engineer or architect. Plans must reference the current California codes (Building, Residential, Electrical, Plumbing) and Santa Cruz County Code Section 12.10.216. Submittals identify property lines, easements, setbacks, overhead utility lines, and any windows or doors with glazing within 5 feet of the pool, spa, or hot tub edge. Mechanical and electrical plans must show a weatherproof GFCI receptacle located between 10 and 20 feet of the water's edge, an electrical layout complying with the California Electrical Code, and two hydraulically balanced circulation drains at least 3 feet apart. A separate grading permit is required if fill exceeds 100 cubic yards exported off-site, fill spread on-site exceeds 2 feet in depth, or fill is placed on slopes steeper than 20 percent. Fees are based on department review fees and project square footage. Plans are submitted through the County's ePlan Review system.
Building or altering a pool, spa, or hot tub without the required permit can trigger a stop-work order and an As-Built permit process to legalize unpermitted work; if no permit was issued, a building permit is required to build a compliant enclosure but does not legalize the pool itself. County building inspectors who identify life-safety hazards during inspection may issue a correction notice.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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