Riverside County's tree regulations include Ordinance No. 559 (oak preservation), Ordinance No. 457 (tree-trimming in public rights-of-way), and the Western Riverside MSHCP. State laws also apply: CA Desert Native Plants Act, Western Joshua Tree Conservation Act, and PRC §4291 (defensible space).
Tree regulation in unincorporated Riverside County comes from multiple overlapping ordinances and state statutes. Ordinance No. 559 is the primary oak preservation ordinance, protecting native oaks 6 inches DBH and larger. Ordinance No. 457 regulates tree-trimming and removal in the public right-of-way, requiring an encroachment permit from the Transportation Department. The Western Riverside County MSHCP covers approximately 1.26 million acres and restricts vegetation disturbance in conservation areas. California Public Resources Code §4291 requires 100 feet of defensible space around structures in State Responsibility Areas (SRA), which includes most unincorporated foothills and mountain areas — trees and vegetation must be cleared or thinned per Cal Fire guidelines. CA Government Code §51182 adds Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone requirements. The Desert Native Plants Act regulates desert flora. Urban forestry on county-maintained roads is managed by the Transportation Department, and homeowners must obtain permits before topping or removing parkway trees. Violations of tree ordinances can carry fines of $100-$10,000 per tree plus mandatory mitigation.
Specific penalty amounts for this ordinance are not published in a publicly accessible fine schedule. Contact Riverside County code enforcement directly for current fines, enforcement procedures, and hearing options.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Riverside County, CA
On-road motor vehicle noise in unincorporated Riverside County is governed mainly by the California Vehicle Code, which the county's own Noise Element acknow...
Riverside County, CA
Under County Ordinance 413, only the Director of Transportation may paint curbs to mark parking rules in the unincorporated county. Red means no stopping, ye...
Riverside County, CA
County Ordinance 413, Section 1.9, lets the Director of Transportation establish loading and passenger loading zones marked by colored curbs. Yellow zones al...
Riverside County, CA
Movement of oversize or overweight vehicles on unincorporated Riverside County roads requires a permit from the road commissioner under County Code Chapter 1...
Riverside County, CA
Common fencing materials - wood, vinyl, masonry block, and metal - are permitted in unincorporated Riverside County, subject only to Ordinance No. 348 Sectio...
Anza, CA
Anza is an unincorporated community in Riverside County governed by Riverside County Ordinance 787 (Fire Code) and the California Fire Code §307. Backyard re...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Riverside County.
See how other cities in Riverside County handle tree ordinances.
See how Anza's tree ordinances rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.