Inland Empire / High Desert
San Bernardino County Tiny Home and ADU Guide
High desert land often requires careful review of water source, septic feasibility, access, fire response, and zoning before purchase.
ADU overview
Check state ADU eligibility first, then compare local objective standards, fire access, utility capacity, parking, historic, coastal, and site constraints.
Zoning lookup links
Use the assessor/APN and GIS links to identify the parcel, then confirm zoning with planning staff. Record the zoning district and overlays before assuming a tiny home, ADU, or vacant-land residence is allowed.
Utilities, septic, and wells
Do not rely on a map pin alone. Confirm water, sewer, power, gas, fire-flow, connection fees, meter capacity, and any line extension costs with the serving provider. Rural and unincorporated parcels may need environmental health review, soil testing, perc testing, leach field area, well separation, and reserve area before a dwelling can be approved.
Questions to ask
Who has jurisdiction? What use category applies? What setbacks apply? Is sewer required? Is septic feasible? Are fire, flood, slope, habitat, or private-road issues present? What submittals are needed?
- Confirm city versus unincorporated county jurisdiction.
- Find APN, zoning district, overlays, and parcel size.
- Call planning, building, environmental health, fire, and utility providers.
- Ask for written links or code references before purchasing land.
- Use professional help for unclear parcels, vacant land, rural utilities, or septic.