Sacramento County Code Section 16.36.130 requires a self-latching barrier, and where a dwelling wall with a door provides direct pool access, a separation fence is required. The County also recognizes approved child safety devices, pool alarms (UL 2017), and ASTM-compliant safety covers. California's Pool Safety Act (HSC 115922 et seq.) sets parallel drowning-prevention requirements.
Beyond the perimeter barrier, Sacramento County Code Section 16.36.130 addresses direct-access hazards: where a wall of a dwelling serves as part of the barrier and has door openings providing direct access to the pool, a separation fence meeting the barrier standards must be provided. The County recognizes alternatives, including an Approved Child Safety Device (defined in Section 16.36.120) where the Chief of Building Inspection determines in writing it provides protection equal to a separation fence, and pool covers meeting ASTM F1346-91. The County lists approved pool alarms tested to UL 2017 (e.g., Pool Guard Model DAPT). For above-ground pools where access is by ladder or steps, the ladder/steps must be securable, lockable, or removable, or be surrounded by a conforming barrier. Separately, California's Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code Sections 115922-115929) requires, for new construction or remodels of residential pools, an enclosure plus at least one approved drowning-prevention safety feature (such as approved enclosure, removable mesh fencing, safety cover, exit alarms on doors, or self-closing self-latching devices). Because the County's Chapter 16.36 and the state Pool Safety Act both apply, owners should satisfy whichever requirements are stricter. Confirm current standards with County Development and Code Services.
Pools that lack a compliant barrier, separation fence, or approved safety feature cannot pass final inspection or be filled. Code enforcement may require retrofits.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Sacramento County, CA
Outdoor music in unincorporated Sacramento County is held to the Chapter 6.68 exterior noise standards, with the residential limit reduced 5 dBA because it i...
Sacramento County, CA
County Code Section 6.68.070 sets exterior noise standards for unincorporated Sacramento County: 55 dBA during the day (7 a.m. to 10 p.m.) and 50 dBA at nigh...
Sacramento County, CA
Curb colors in unincorporated Sacramento County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458, which says only local authorities may mark curbs to indicate pa...
Sacramento County, CA
Loading zones in unincorporated Sacramento County are set under County Code Chapter 10.24. The Director marks loading zones with yellow or white curbs. Yello...
Sacramento County, CA
Oversized vehicles in unincorporated Sacramento County are addressed mainly through the 72-hour street limit and the heavy commercial-vehicle restriction. Mo...
Sacramento County, CA
Sacramento County recognizes solid walls, semi-open picket, open chain link or woven wire, and open ornamental wrought iron as fence types, each with its own...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Sacramento County.
See how other cities in Sacramento County handle safety rules.
See how Courtland's safety rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.