Part 12 · Title 24, CCR
California Referenced Standards Code (CRSC)
Title 24, Part 12 — the master list of technical standards adopted by reference into and enforced under the California Building Standards Code.
What CRSC covers
The California Referenced Standards Code (CRSC) is Part 12 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations). Its job is unusual: instead of writing its own design requirements, it lists and adopts by reference the technical standards — from organizations like ASTM, ASCE, ANSI, NFPA and UL — that the other parts of Title 24 rely on. When a chapter of the building or plumbing code cites a standard, the CRSC is where that standard is formally adopted and given a specific edition.
The 2025 California Referenced Standards Code is the current edition, effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 edition. Adopting standards by reference keeps the working codes shorter and makes sure every part of Title 24 points to the same approved edition of a standard. Because the controlling edition of a referenced standard can change between code cycles and local adoptions, GoCodebook reconciles which version actually applies to your project — ask it directly.
What the California Referenced Standards Code does
The CRSC is a list code: it provides a comprehensive catalog of the standards referenced throughout the California Building Standards Code, identifying each by its designation, edition year, title, and the promulgating organization. These standards cover materials, test methods, and installation practices — for example structural-steel specifications, fire-test methods, plastic-pipe standards, and accessibility product standards — that the design codes incorporate rather than reproduce.
By centralizing this list, the CRSC ensures that when the California Building Code (CBC, Part 2) and the CALGreen code (Part 11) both cite a material standard, they point to the same adopted edition. It also contains certain minimum safety and accessibility requirements that govern the quality of materials and equipment used in California buildings.
How adoption by reference works
A standard becomes legally enforceable in California in two steps. First, a working code (such as the building, plumbing or fire code) references the standard by name in its provisions. Second, the CRSC adopts that standard by reference and fixes the specific edition that applies. Once both happen, the referenced standard carries the same legal force as the code text itself — which is why two editions of the same standard can produce different compliance outcomes.
This matters in practice because a project must use the edition the code adopted, not necessarily the latest published version of a standard. Mismatched editions are a common source of plan-check corrections. You can ask GoCodebook which edition of a referenced standard your jurisdiction enforces, then verify it against the original. See where coverage is deepest.
Relationship to the other parts of Title 24
The CRSC underpins nearly every other part of Title 24. Provisions in the CBC (Part 2), the California Existing Building Code (CEBC, Part 10), and the mechanical, plumbing, electrical and fire codes all defer to standards collected in Part 12. Rather than each code maintaining its own list, the referenced-standards approach gives the whole building code a single, coordinated source of truth for technical specifications.
Because the standards are regularly updated to reflect advances in materials and methods, each three-year Title 24 cycle re-evaluates which editions to adopt. GoCodebook identifies the adopted edition and any local amendments for your address and returns the governing provision — including the controlling referenced standard — with a citation so you can confirm the original language quickly.
Who needs the CRSC
CRSC — frequently asked questions
What is the current edition of the California Referenced Standards Code?
The 2025 California Referenced Standards Code (Title 24, Part 12) is current, effective January 1, 2026, replacing the 2022 edition. It is updated each three-year code cycle to adopt current editions of the standards referenced throughout Title 24.
What is a referenced standard in the California building code?
A referenced standard is a technical specification — from a body like ASTM, ASCE, ANSI, NFPA or UL — that a code provision cites rather than reproduces. The CRSC (Part 12) formally adopts these standards by reference and fixes which edition applies, giving them the same legal force as the code text.
How does adoption by reference make a standard enforceable?
It takes two steps: a working code (such as the CBC) cites the standard, and the CRSC adopts it and sets the controlling edition. After both, the referenced standard is enforceable just like the code itself — so the adopted edition, not the newest one, governs.
Why does the CRSC matter if it does not contain design requirements?
Because it ensures every part of Title 24 points to the same approved edition of each standard, preventing conflicts between codes. Using the wrong edition of a referenced standard is a frequent cause of plan-check corrections — GoCodebook tells you the edition your jurisdiction enforces.
Which parts of Title 24 use referenced standards?
Effectively all of them. The CBC (Part 2), CEBC (Part 10), CALGreen (Part 11), and the mechanical, plumbing, electrical and fire codes all defer to standards collected in Part 12, giving the building code a single coordinated source for technical specifications.
Where to read the CRSC
California's adopted codes — including the California Referenced Standards Code (CRSC) — 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 CRSC answers in seconds
Ask GoCodebook any question about the California Referenced Standards Code (CRSC) and get a plain-English answer with the exact code citation — for your jurisdiction and the adopted edition.
Start Free TrialExplore the rest of Title 24
Part 1
California Administrative Code (CAC)
Part 2
California Building Code (CBC)
Part 2.5
California Residential Code (CRC)
Part 3
California Electrical Code (CEC)
Part 4
California Mechanical Code (CMC)
Part 5
California Plumbing Code (CPC)
Part 6
California Energy Code
Part 7
California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC)
Part 8
California Historical Building Code (CHBC)
Part 9
California Fire Code (CFC)
Part 10
California Existing Building Code (CEBC)
Part 11
California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen) (CALGreen)