Part 9 · Title 24, CCR

California Fire Code (CFC)

Title 24, Part 9 — the fire prevention, fire-protection-system, life-safety and operational requirements that govern buildings and sites throughout California.

What CFC covers

Fire prevention & general safety Automatic sprinkler systems (NFPA 13) Fire alarm & detection systems Fire apparatus access roads Fire-flow & water supply Operational & construction permits Hazardous materials storage Defensible space & WUI context

The California Fire Code (CFC) is Part 9 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations). It sets the requirements for fire prevention, fire protection systems, life safety and hazardous-materials handling in new and existing buildings, structures and premises. The CFC is based on the International Fire Code (IFC) with California-specific amendments, and it works hand-in-hand with the California Building Code (Part 2) — the CBC governs how a building is built, while the CFC governs how it is protected, maintained and operated.

The 2025 California Fire Code is the current edition, effective January 1, 2026 (based on the 2024 IFC), replacing the 2022 CFC. A notable 2025-cycle change: provisions for wildfire-exposed construction that once lived in CFC Chapter 49 were relocated into the new California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (Part 7). Because cities, counties and fire districts adopt the statewide edition and frequently add local amendments, the exact requirement for your project depends on the adopted edition and local changes — which is exactly what GoCodebook reconciles for you.

What the California Fire Code regulates

The CFC covers a broad sweep of fire and life safety. Core areas include automatic fire sprinkler systems (with thresholds in Chapter 9 — for example the Section 903.2 conditions that require sprinklers, installed to standards such as NFPA 13, 13R or 13D), fire alarm and detection systems, standpipes, fire apparatus access roads, fire-flow and water-supply requirements including hydrant spacing, means of egress maintenance, and hazardous-materials storage, use and quantity limits. It also governs day-to-day fire safety on sites, from open flame and fireworks to spray finishing and high-piled storage.

A defining feature of the CFC is its permit framework. Chapter 1 establishes both construction permits (for installing or modifying sprinklers, alarms, hazmat systems and the like) and operational permits (for ongoing activities such as places of assembly, hazardous materials, and hot-work operations). These permits are how the fire code authority — the fire marshal or fire department — exercises ongoing enforcement after a building is occupied. See where coverage is deepest.

Sprinklers, alarms and fire access — the questions people actually ask

The most common CFC searches are about when a sprinkler system is required. The triggers depend on occupancy group, fire area size, building height and use — Group R residential occupancies, large assembly and mercantile spaces, and certain hazardous uses are common triggers under Section 903.2. The installation standard (NFPA 13 for most commercial buildings, 13R for many multifamily buildings, 13D for one- and two-family dwellings) then dictates head spacing, water supply and design.

Equally common are fire apparatus access road questions — required width, turning radius, grade, and the 150-foot reach to all portions of a building — and fire-flow calculations that size the required water supply and hydrants. Because these provisions interact with the building code and with the new WUI Code, and because fire districts amend them heavily, the same question can have different answers a few miles apart.

Defensible space, the WUI Code, and local amendments

Defensible space — the vegetation clearance around structures in fire-prone areas — is enforced through the fire code and state fire law (the 100-foot clearance and Zone 0/1/2 framework). The CFC handles this operational, site-condition side of wildfire safety, while ignition-resistant construction materials moved to the new California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (Part 7) in the 2025 cycle. Together they cover both how a building is hardened and how its surroundings are managed.

Fire codes are among the most heavily locally amended parts of Title 24, because climate, terrain, water infrastructure and department resources vary so much across California. GoCodebook identifies the adopted edition and local fire-code amendments for your address and returns the governing provision with a citation, so you can verify the original language before you design, permit or inspect.

Who needs the CFC

Fire protection engineersArchitectsGeneral contractorsBuilding & fire plan checkersFire marshals & inspectorsSprinkler & alarm contractorsFacility managersDevelopers

CFC — frequently asked questions

What is the current edition of the California Fire Code?

The 2025 California Fire Code is current, effective January 1, 2026 (based on the 2024 International Fire Code), replacing the 2022 CFC. Local jurisdictions and fire districts adopt the statewide edition and frequently add amendments.

When does the California Fire Code require fire sprinklers?

Sprinkler requirements are set in Chapter 9, Section 903.2 and depend on occupancy, fire area size, height and use. Systems are installed to standards like NFPA 13 (commercial), 13R (many multifamily) or 13D (one- and two-family dwellings). Local amendments may lower the thresholds.

What is the difference between the Fire Code and the Building Code?

The California Building Code governs how a building is constructed; the California Fire Code (Part 9) governs how it is protected, maintained and operated — sprinklers, alarms, access, hazmat and ongoing fire safety. Most projects must satisfy both.

What permits does the California Fire Code require?

Chapter 1 establishes construction permits (installing or modifying sprinklers, alarms and hazmat systems) and operational permits (ongoing activities like assembly, hazardous materials and hot work). The fire code official issues and enforces them.

Does the Fire Code cover defensible space and wildfire?

Yes — the CFC and state fire law cover defensible space vegetation clearance, while ignition-resistant construction materials moved to the new California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (Part 7) in 2025. Ask GoCodebook to see which applies to your site.

Where to read the CFC

California's adopted codes — including the California Fire Code (CFC) — are published under Title 24 and hosted on code libraries such as UpCodes (up.codes) and ICC Digital Codes from the International Code Council (ICC). Those let you read the text section by section.

GoCodebook goes further: instead of searching a code library, you ask a question and get the controlling provision for the edition and local amendments your jurisdiction adopted, with a citation to verify. See how GoCodebook compares to UpCodes and ICC.

Get cited CFC answers in seconds

Ask GoCodebook any question about the California Fire Code (CFC) and get a plain-English answer with the exact code citation — for your jurisdiction and the adopted edition.

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