California city profile

Pacifica

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

10 local environmental rules that apply here
41 projects filed for environmental review in Pacifica
City of Pacifica most frequent lead agency 15 filings as lead

Local ordinances that apply in Pacifica

These San Mateo County rules apply to projects in Pacifica.

  • Coastal Zone San Mateo County
  • Fire Hazard / Defensible Space San Mateo County
  • Floodplain San Mateo County
  • Grading & Excavation San Mateo County
  • Hillside Management San Mateo County
  • Noise San Mateo County
  • Scenic Corridors & Highways San Mateo County
  • Stormwater / LID San Mateo County
  • Tree Preservation San Mateo County
  • Wildfire San Mateo County

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

What catches people off guard in San Mateo County

These San Mateo County rules apply to projects in Pacifica, on top of any city-specific Pacifica requirements.

Coastal Zone tree rules differ

The county's recently consolidated Protected Tree Ordinance is not effective in the Coastal Zone — separate heritage tree provisions apply there instead, so the same removal that needs one kind of permit inland requires a different process at the coast.

Hillside district lower threshold

Properties in the Residential Hillside zoning district are protected by a lower tree trunk-size threshold than the rest of the county — so hillside homeowners may face permit requirements for trees that wouldn't be protected on a flatland parcel.

Short construction windows

Construction in unincorporated San Mateo ends in the early evening on weekdays, starts later on Saturdays, and is prohibited on Sundays and most holidays — among the more restrictive construction-hour schedules in the Bay Area.

Coastal Development Permit required

The entire western coastside — including Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, and Pescadero — requires a Coastal Development Permit for most new development, stacked on top of county building permits.

San Bruno Mountain HCP

The first habitat conservation plan adopted in the country covers a specific area around San Bruno Mountain, protecting several rare butterfly and snake species — new development in or near that area may trigger mitigation requirements not apparent from standard county zoning.

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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 Pacifica planning department or San Mateo County directly.