Part 6 · Title 24, CCR

California Energy Code

Title 24, Part 6 — California's building energy-efficiency standards for the envelope, HVAC, lighting, water heating, solar PV and battery storage in residential and nonresidential buildings.

What California Energy Code covers

Building envelope & insulation HVAC efficiency & sizing Lighting & controls Water heating & heat pumps Solar PV mandate Battery energy storage Compliance forms (CF1R/CF2R/CF3R) 16 California climate zones

The California Energy Code is Part 6 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations) — commonly called the Title 24 energy code or simply Title 24, Part 6. It sets minimum energy-efficiency standards for the building envelope, HVAC, lighting, water heating, solar photovoltaics and battery storage in both residential and nonresidential buildings. Unlike most other parts of Title 24, it is developed by the California Energy Commission (CEC) rather than reprinting a model code, and applies across California's 16 climate zones.

The 2025 California Energy Code is the current edition, effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 edition. Each three-year cycle tightens efficiency and expands electrification — the 2025 update strengthens heat-pump baselines for space and water heating and broadens solar PV plus battery energy storage requirements to more building types. Because local jurisdictions may adopt reach codes that go further, the requirements for your project depend on the adopted edition and local amendments — which is exactly what GoCodebook reconciles for you.

What the California Energy Code regulates

Title 24, Part 6 governs how efficiently a building uses energy. Core areas include the building envelope (insulation, fenestration U-factor/SHGC, air sealing and cool roofs), HVAC efficiency, sizing and duct sealing, lighting power and controls, water heating (with a strong push toward heat-pump water heaters), and on-site solar PV generation paired with battery storage. Requirements vary by climate zone — your zone depends on the project address, not just the city.

Compliance can be demonstrated two ways: the prescriptive path (meet each component requirement) or the performance path (model the whole building against an energy budget using CEC-approved software). The Energy Code works hand-in-hand with the California Mechanical Code (Part 4) for HVAC installation and the California Plumbing Code (Part 5) for water-heating piping.

Solar PV, battery storage and heat pumps in the 2025 code

The 2025 cycle expands the solar PV mandate and now pairs it with battery energy storage for many building types — including low-rise and high-rise multifamily, hotels/motels, and nonresidential occupancies such as offices, retail, schools, grocery, restaurants and warehouses that meet roof-area minimums. Storage is sized by the Energy Code's equations, and pairing qualifying storage can reduce the required PV size. The code also tightens heat-pump baselines and now requires third-party refrigerant-charge verification across climate zones.

These provisions are some of the most-searched Title 24 topics because they drive cost and design early. Rather than parsing the regulation text, ask GoCodebook whether PV and storage are required for your occupancy and climate zone and get the controlling section with a citation. See where coverage is deepest.

Title 24 compliance forms, HERS verification and local adoption

Residential projects document compliance with a set of registered forms: the CF1R (Certificate of Compliance) prepared during design, the CF2R (Certificate of Installation) completed by the installing contractor, and the CF3R (Certificate of Verification) completed by a third-party HERS rater for field testing such as duct leakage and refrigerant charge. Nonresidential projects use the parallel NRCC/NRCI/NRCV forms. These are typically required before permit and at final inspection.

The Energy Commission sets the statewide standard, but cities and counties can adopt reach codes that exceed it — for example all-electric or higher-efficiency requirements. GoCodebook identifies the adopted edition and local amendments for your address and returns the governing provision with a citation. For green-building overlap, also check CALGreen (Part 11).

Who needs the California Energy Code

ArchitectsEnergy consultantsHERS ratersMechanical engineersGeneral contractorsSolar & storage installersPlan checkersDevelopers

California Energy Code — frequently asked questions

What is the California Energy Code (Title 24, Part 6)?

It is California's building energy-efficiency standard — Part 6 of Title 24 — covering the envelope, HVAC, lighting, water heating, solar PV and battery storage for residential and nonresidential buildings, developed by the California Energy Commission and applied across 16 climate zones.

What is the current edition of the Title 24 energy code?

The 2025 California Energy Code is current, effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 edition. It strengthens heat-pump baselines and expands solar PV plus battery storage requirements. Local jurisdictions may adopt reach codes that go further.

Does the 2025 Energy Code require solar panels and a battery?

For many building types, yes — the 2025 code expands the solar PV mandate and pairs it with battery energy storage for low-rise and high-rise multifamily, hotels/motels, and qualifying nonresidential occupancies. Whether it applies depends on occupancy, size and climate zone — ask GoCodebook for your project.

What are the CF1R, CF2R and CF3R forms?

They are the residential Title 24 compliance documents: the CF1R is the Certificate of Compliance (design), the CF2R is the Certificate of Installation (contractor), and the CF3R is the Certificate of Verification completed by a HERS rater. Nonresidential projects use the NRCC/NRCI/NRCV forms.

How is residential energy compliance different from nonresidential?

Both follow Part 6 but use different requirements and forms — residential uses CF1R/CF2R/CF3R and HERS field verification, while nonresidential uses NRCC/NRCI/NRCV and has its own lighting, mechanical and PV/storage provisions. Requirements also vary by climate zone. Ask GoCodebook for the path that applies to your building.

Where to read the California Energy Code

California's adopted codes — including the California Energy Code — 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 answers in seconds

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

Start Free Trial

Explore the rest of Title 24