Madera County does not publish a routine tree-removal permit ordinance for private trees in the unincorporated areas. Native oak woodlands are protected at the project level through CEQA and the General Plan rather than a per-tree permit. Removing oaks as part of development can require mitigation under California Public Resources Code § 21083.4.
Unincorporated Madera County does not impose a general, numbered tree-removal-permit requirement on a homeowner taking down a tree on an established homesite. Tree and oak-woodland protection in the County operates chiefly through land-use and environmental review rather than a routine permit counter. Native oaks—abundant in the County's Sierra foothills around communities like Oakhurst and Coarsegold—are addressed by the Madera County General Plan's natural-resource policies and through environmental review under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), which the County administers via its Environmental Impact provisions in Madera County Code Title 16. When a discretionary project such as a subdivision, grading, or development approval would remove oak woodland, California Public Resources Code Section 21083.4 directs the county to determine whether the project may significantly affect oak woodlands and, if so, to require mitigation—options the statute lists include conserving oak woodlands through easements, planting replacement trees (with a cap on how much of the mitigation may be met by planting), contributing to the Oak Woodlands Conservation Fund, or other approved measures. Outside of such project approvals, a single tree on a developed lot generally needs no County permit. Because requirements turn on a parcel's zoning, project conditions, and any recorded conservation easements, anyone planning to remove native oaks or clear woodland should confirm current requirements with Madera County Planning before proceeding, and account for related grading, erosion-control, and fire-clearance rules.
Removing oak woodland or protected trees as part of a development project without the CEQA-required mitigation, or in violation of a project condition or recorded easement, can trigger County enforcement and jeopardize project permits. Routine removal of a tree on an established homesite is generally not a permit violation.
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