Local jurisdiction · Sacramento County
Sacramento County Zoning, Planning & Building Codes
What you can build in Sacramento County depends on its local zoning and planning code, layered on the California Building Standards Code. Ask GoCodebook about any Sacramento County address.
Key points
Sacramento County is a county in California. Like every California jurisdiction, Sacramento County regulates development through a local zoning and planning code (often Sacramento Zoning Code (SZC)) — the rules that determine allowed uses, setbacks, height limits, FAR, density and parking — on top of the statewide California Building Standards Code (Title 24).
Those local rules change at the county line, so a remodel, ADU or use that is allowed nearby may be restricted in Sacramento County. GoCodebook reads the Sacramento County ordinance with state code and answers your zoning, planning or permit question with the controlling citation.
Zoning & planning in Sacramento County
Sacramento County's zoning code (often Sacramento Zoning Code (SZC)) assigns each parcel to a district (residential, commercial, industrial, mixed-use and overlays) that sets the allowed uses, setbacks, height, FAR, lot coverage and density. Conditional uses, variances and design review may require discretionary planning approval.
Ask GoCodebook "what's the zoning for [address] in Sacramento County?", "what setback / FAR applies?", or "can I build an ADU or addition here?" and get a cited answer. See coverage.
Building permits & remodeling in Sacramento County
Construction and remodeling in Sacramento County must comply with the adopted Building, Residential, Electrical, Plumbing, Energy and Fire codes, plus any Sacramento County local amendments — and most work needs a building permit.
Additions, remodels and change-of-use can trigger extra requirements (accessibility, energy upgrades, fire). GoCodebook flags what applies to your Sacramento County project before you apply.
Where to read the Sacramento County code
The Sacramento County municipal and zoning code is published online — view the official Sacramento County code library. That lets you read the ordinance section by section.
GoCodebook goes further: it reads the Sacramento County ordinance together with the California Building Standards Code and answers your question — zoning, setbacks, FAR, height, ADUs, permits — with the controlling citation for your parcel.
ADUs, housing & tenant rules in Sacramento County
California's statewide ADU laws override many local restrictions, so Sacramento County must allow accessory dwelling units that meet state size, setback and parking standards. Rentals may also be subject to rent control and AB 1482 protections.
Whether a specific Sacramento County property is covered depends on its zoning, age and ownership — exactly the kind of question GoCodebook answers with a citation.
Who this affects
Frequently asked questions
What is the zoning code for Sacramento County?
Sacramento County adopts a local zoning ordinance (often Sacramento Zoning Code (SZC)) that sets allowed uses, setbacks, height, FAR and density by district, alongside the California Building Standards Code. Ask GoCodebook for your parcel's zoning and what it allows.
What are the setback and FAR rules in Sacramento County?
Setbacks, floor-area ratio (FAR), height and lot coverage in Sacramento County are set by your parcel's zoning district. GoCodebook returns the exact standards for your address with a citation.
Do I need a permit to remodel or build in Sacramento County?
Most new construction, additions and many remodels in Sacramento County require a building permit and must meet the adopted Title 24 codes plus local amendments. GoCodebook tells you what applies before you apply.
Can I build an ADU in Sacramento County?
Generally yes — California's statewide ADU law requires Sacramento County to permit ADUs that meet state standards, even where local rules are stricter.
Ask about any Sacramento County property
Get a cited, plain-English answer on Sacramento County zoning, setbacks, FAR, ADUs, remodels and permits — for any address.
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