Part 7 · Title 24, CCR

California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC)

Title 24, Part 7 — the ignition-resistant and fire-resistant construction rules for new buildings in California's wildland-urban interface and fire hazard severity zones.

What CWUIC covers

WUI fire areas & fire hazard zones Ignition-resistant construction Ember-resistant vents Class A roof assemblies Exterior walls & siding Decks, eaves & projections Exterior windows & glazing Former CBC Chapter 7A materials

The California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC) is Part 7 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations). It sets ignition-resistant and fire-resistant construction requirements for new buildings located in the wildland-urban interface (WUI) — areas where development meets or intermingles with wildland fuels and is exposed to wind-driven embers, radiant heat and direct flame contact during a wildfire. The CWUIC is modeled on the International Wildland-Urban Interface Code (IWUIC) with California-specific amendments.

The 2025 CWUIC is a brand-new Part 7, effective January 1, 2026. For the first time, California consolidated its scattered wildfire-construction rules — formerly CBC Chapter 7A, California Residential Code Section R337 and California Fire Code Chapter 49 — into one standalone code. Because applicability depends on Fire Hazard Severity Zone (FHSZ) maps and local jurisdictions may adopt amendments, the exact requirements for your parcel depend on its mapped zone and your city or county — which is exactly what GoCodebook reconciles for you.

What the California WUI Code regulates

The CWUIC focuses on hardening a building against ember intrusion, radiant heat and direct flame — the three ways wildfires ignite structures. Core requirements include Class A roof assemblies, ember-resistant vents (typically with 1/16-inch to 1/8-inch noncombustible mesh), ignition-resistant or noncombustible exterior walls and siding, tempered or multi-pane exterior glazing, and ignition-resistant decking, eaves, soffits and overhangs. The exterior material standards that used to sit in CBC Chapter 7A now live in the CWUIC, including the SFM-listed product and ASTM test requirements builders cite during plan check.

The code applies to new buildings, additions and certain reconstruction in a designated WUI fire area or Fire Hazard Severity Zone. Whether a parcel is in a moderate, high or very high fire hazard severity zone (VHFHSZ) drives how strict the construction requirements are. The CWUIC governs the structure itself; defensible space vegetation clearance (the 100-foot Zone 0/1/2 rules) is handled separately under state fire law and the California Fire Code. See where coverage is deepest.

Do the WUI rules apply to my property?

Applicability is map-driven. California publishes Fire Hazard Severity Zone maps for both State Responsibility Areas (SRA) and Local Responsibility Areas (LRA), and CAL FIRE updated these maps in 2024–2025, expanding the acreage classified as high or very high hazard. If your parcel falls in a mapped zone — or a locally designated WUI fire area — the CWUIC construction standards apply to new work even when the surrounding neighborhood predates the rules.

Many people confuse the building code (CWUIC, Part 7) with vegetation and defensible-space requirements, but they are distinct. The CWUIC is enforced at plan check and permit for the structure, while defensible space is inspected in the field. Existing homes are generally not required to retrofit unless they undergo significant alteration — though insurers increasingly request WUI-hardening upgrades. For change-of-occupancy and major alteration questions, the California Existing Building Code also comes into play.

How the CWUIC interacts with the rest of Title 24

A WUI project rarely triggers Part 7 alone. The base structure is still designed under the California Building Code (Part 2) or California Residential Code, while operational fire-safety, water-supply and access provisions come from the California Fire Code (Part 9). The CWUIC layers ignition-resistant material requirements on top of all of that, and CALGreen and the Energy Code still apply.

Because the 2025 cycle moved provisions between parts, contractors and designers who learned the old "Chapter 7A" workflow have to re-map their references to the new Part 7 section numbers. GoCodebook identifies your parcel's fire hazard zone, the adopted edition and any local amendments, then returns the governing CWUIC provision with a citation so you can verify the original language quickly.

Who needs the CWUIC

ArchitectsHome buildersGeneral contractorsDevelopersFire-hardening specialistsBuilding & fire plan checkersHomeowners in fire zonesInsurance & risk assessors

CWUIC — frequently asked questions

What is the California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC)?

It is Part 7 of Title 24, a new standalone code effective January 1, 2026 that sets ignition-resistant construction requirements for new buildings in California's wildland-urban interface and fire hazard severity zones. It consolidates the former CBC Chapter 7A, CRC R337 and CFC Chapter 49.

What happened to Chapter 7A?

In the 2025 code cycle the Building Standards Commission deleted Chapter 7A from the California Building Code and relocated its provisions into the new California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (Part 7). The substantive exterior material standards now live in the CWUIC.

Does the WUI code require ember-resistant vents?

Yes. Buildings in a WUI fire area must use ember- and flame-resistant vents, typically with noncombustible mesh sized to block embers (commonly 1/16-inch to 1/8-inch). The CWUIC also requires Class A roofs, ignition-resistant siding, eaves and decks.

How do I know if my property is in a WUI fire area?

Applicability is based on Fire Hazard Severity Zone maps published by CAL FIRE for State and Local Responsibility Areas, plus any locally designated WUI fire areas. Ask GoCodebook with your address to confirm the mapped zone and which CWUIC requirements apply.

Is defensible space part of the WUI code?

No — the CWUIC governs the structure (materials and assemblies), while defensible space vegetation clearance is set by state fire law and the California Fire Code. The two work together but are enforced separately at permit versus field inspection.

Where to read the CWUIC

California's adopted codes — including the California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC) — 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 CWUIC answers in seconds

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

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