California city profile

Claremont

Claremont is an incorporated city in Los Angeles County. Projects here follow Claremont's own zoning and building rules on top of the county-level environmental rules that apply across Los Angeles County. The county rules most likely to catch a project applicant off guard are listed below.

14 local environmental rules that apply here
16 projects filed for environmental review in Claremont
City of Claremont most frequent lead agency 5 filings as lead

Local ordinances that apply in Claremont

These Los Angeles County rules apply to projects in Claremont.

  • Fire Hazard / Defensible Space Los Angeles County
  • Floodplain Los Angeles County
  • Grading & Excavation Los Angeles County
  • Hillside Management Los Angeles County
  • Noise Los Angeles County
  • Oak Woodland Conservation Los Angeles County
  • Ridgeline / Hillside Protection Los Angeles County
  • Right to Farm Los Angeles County
  • Scenic Corridors & Highways Los Angeles County
  • Sensitive Habitat Los Angeles County
  • Stormwater / LID Los Angeles County
  • Tree Preservation Los Angeles County
  • Wildfire Los Angeles County
  • Williamson Act / Agricultural Preserve Los Angeles County

Specific thresholds and code citations for each ordinance are included in a property screening report.

What catches people off guard in Los Angeles County

These Los Angeles County rules apply to projects in Claremont, on top of any city-specific Claremont requirements.

Oak tree permits required

Removing or encroaching on a native oak requires a county permit and an arborist report — yes, even on your own private property, and even for trees that appear modest in size.

Significant Ecological Areas

If your parcel sits in or next to one of the county's designated ecological areas, you'll need a Conditional Use Permit and a biological constraints analysis — and the stormwater standard that triggers low-impact design drops significantly within those boundaries.

Ridgeline no-build zones

Development above designated ridgeline elevations is prohibited in the mountain communities; a parcel that looks buildable on a map may have a significant portion of its area off-limits once ridgeline protection is applied.

Rainy season grading freeze

Grading without an approved erosion control plan is prohibited during the wet season, which runs from fall through mid-spring — missing this window can push a project's construction start by many months.

Tribal consultation at scale

LA County spans multiple indigenous territories, and the county's tribal consultation list is one of the longest in California — the process is multi-party and needs to start early enough to allow for meaningful engagement.

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Source: Headlands Environmental — environmental site screening for California. Rules summarized from publicly available county codes and planning documents; project review counts indexed from the State Clearinghouse. For authoritative requirements, consult the Claremont planning department or Los Angeles County directly.