Part 1 · Title 24, CCR

California Administrative Code (CAC)

Title 24, Part 1 — the administrative rules that govern how California's building standards are adopted, amended, published and enforced by state agencies and local jurisdictions.

What CAC covers

Code-adoption procedures Triennial (3-year) cycle Building Standards Commission HCD, DSA & HCAI roles State agency amendments Local adoption & amendments Enforcement authority Matrix adoption tables

The California Administrative Code (CAC) is Part 1 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations). Unlike the technical parts of Title 24, Part 1 does not set construction standards — it sets the administrative regulations and procedures that govern how every other part of Title 24 is proposed, adopted, amended, published and enforced. It is the rulebook for the rulebook, and it is published and maintained by the California Building Standards Commission (BSC) within the Department of General Services.

The 2025 California Administrative Code is the current edition, effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 CAC. Title 24 is updated on a three-year (triennial) cycle, and state agencies such as HCD, DSA and HCAI propose amendments that the BSC approves and codifies. Local jurisdictions then adopt the statewide code and may add their own amendments — so the controlling rules for a project depend on the adopted edition and any local changes, which is exactly what GoCodebook reconciles for you.

What the California Administrative Code regulates

Part 1 establishes the procedures and authority behind Title 24. It defines how proposed building standards move through rulemaking, how public comment is handled, how standards are codified into the California Code of Regulations, and how the resulting code is enforced by local building departments. It also contains the matrix adoption tables that show which state agency adopted a given provision and which occupancies it applies to — a key tool for tracing the origin of any requirement in the technical parts of Title 24.

Because the CAC governs process rather than physical construction, it is most often consulted to answer questions about which edition applies, when it takes effect, who has authority, and how amendments are made. Those answers in turn determine how to read the California Building Code (CBC, Part 2) and every other technical part. See where GoCodebook coverage is deepest.

The agencies behind Title 24

Several state agencies write the building standards that the Building Standards Commission adopts into Title 24. The Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) develops standards for residential occupancies, including the California Residential Code (CRC, Part 2.5), ADUs and manufactured housing. The Division of the State Architect (DSA) develops accessibility and K–12 school and community-college standards. The Department of Health Care Access and Information (HCAI, formerly OSHPD) develops standards for hospitals and skilled-nursing facilities.

Other proposing agencies include the California Energy Commission for the Electrical and Energy provisions, and the Office of the State Fire Marshal for fire and life-safety standards. The CAC documents each agency's authority and the matrix tables that map provisions back to the agency that adopted them — so you always know who is responsible for a given rule.

The triennial cycle and local adoption

California adopts a new edition of Title 24 on a three-year cycle. The 2025 code was published July 1, 2025 and became effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 edition. The CAC sets out the timeline for this process — pre-cycle activities, the 45-day public comment period, code advisory committee review, and BSC adoption. The 2025 cycle was generally a minor revision, with administrative updates that codify current practices and procedures.

Once the statewide edition is published, cities and counties adopt it locally and may add amendments justified by local climatic, geological or topographical conditions. That means two neighboring jurisdictions can enforce different versions of the same provision. GoCodebook identifies the adopted edition and local amendments for your address and returns the governing rule with a citation. Compare with the GoCodebook answer engine across the full CBC and sibling codes.

Who needs the CAC

Building officialsPlan checkersPermit consultantsArchitectsCode consultantsCity & county staffDevelopersCompliance teams

CAC — frequently asked questions

What is the California Administrative Code (Part 1)?

The California Administrative Code (CAC) is Part 1 of Title 24. It sets the administrative regulations and procedures for how California building standards are adopted, amended, published and enforced — not the technical construction standards themselves.

What is the current edition of the California Administrative Code?

The 2025 California Administrative Code is current, published July 1, 2025 and effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 CAC. Title 24 is updated on a three-year cycle.

Who adopts and publishes Title 24?

The California Building Standards Commission (BSC) publishes Title 24. State agencies including HCD (residential), DSA (accessibility and schools) and HCAI/OSHPD (health facilities) propose the standards that the BSC adopts.

How often is the California Building Standards Code updated?

On a triennial (three-year) cycle, with intervening supplements. The current 2025 edition replaced the 2022 edition on January 1, 2026. Local jurisdictions then adopt the statewide code and may add amendments.

Does the Administrative Code contain construction requirements?

No. The CAC governs process and authority — adoption, enforcement and matrix adoption tables. For construction requirements, see the technical parts such as the CBC, CRC and CEC.

Where to read the CAC

California's adopted codes — including the California Administrative Code (CAC) — 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.

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

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