Adult-Oriented Business.An establishment or concern that, as a regular and substantial course of conduct, offers, sells or distributes adult-oriented merchandise, or that offers to its patrons materials, products, merchandise, services, entertainment or performances that have sexual arousal, sexual gratification, and/or sexual stimulation as their dominant theme, or are characterized by an emphasis on specified sexual activities or specified anatomical areas and are not customarily open to the general public because they exclude minors by virtue of their age. This classification does not include any establishment offering professional services conducted, operated, or supervised by medical practitioners, physical therapists, nurses, chiropractors, psychologist, social workers, marriage and family counselors, osteopaths, and persons holding licenses or certificates under applicable State law or accreditation from recognized programs when performing functions pursuant to the respective license or certificate (see Offices, Medical and Dental).
Animal Care, Sales and Services.Retail sales and services related to the boarding, grooming, and care of household pets including:
A. Kennel. Facilities for keeping, boarding, training, breeding or maintaining for commercial purposes, four or more dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the kennel owner or operator. It excludes Pet Stores and Veterinary Services that provide 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical or grooming services.
B. Pet Day Care. Facilities for providing non-medical care for four or more dogs, cats, or other household pets not owned by the pet day care owner or operator on a less than 24-hour basis.
C. Pet Store. Retail sales of animals and/or services, including grooming, for animals on a commercial basis. This classification excludes dog walking and similar pet care services not carried out at a fixed location and excludes pet supply stores that do not sell animals or provide on-site animal services (see Retail, General).
D. Veterinary Service. Medical care for small animals on a commercial basis. This classification allows 24-hour accommodation of animals receiving medical or grooming services but does not include kennels.
Arts and Makers Uses.Uses intended for the creation, manufacturing, performance, exhibition, sale, or assemblage of art and goods by artists and makers. This classification may include the following uses; live-work residential, studios (arts, dance, music, etc.); arts exhibition space; maker's space; breweries or distilleries; artisan shops; media production; clean technology; food preparation; handicraft/custom manufacturing; manufacturing finished parts or products primarily from previously prepared materials; printing; engraving and publishing; furniture and related product manufacturing; college and trade school, public or private; cultural assembly; community garden; cultural institution; or similar uses.
Artist's Studio. Work space for an artist or artisan including individuals practicing one of the fine arts or performing arts, or skilled in an applied art or craft, with incidental retail sales of items produced on-site. Artist's studios do not produce significant odors, fumes, noise, particulate matter emissions, or other disturbances (see Maker's Space).
Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Services.Retail or wholesale business that sell, rent, and/or repair automobiles, trucks, vans, trailers, motorcycles including the following:
C. Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Major. Repair of automobiles, trucks, motorcycles, motor homes, boats and recreational vehicles, including the sale, installation, and servicing of related equipment and parts, generally on an overnight basis. This classification includes the servicing and repair of engines, body and fender, transmission, axles, wheels and brake, auto glass services, tire sales and installation, and vehicle painting. Excludes vehicle dismantling or salvaging and tire retreading or recapping.
D. Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Minor. The service and repair of automobiles, light-duty trucks, boats, and motorcycles, including the sale, installation, and servicing of related equipment and parts. This classification includes the replacement of small automotive parts and liquids as an accessory use to a gasoline sales station or automotive accessories and supply store, and quick-service oil, tune-up and brake and muffler shops, auto glass sales and replacement, stereo and alarm sales, and tire sales where repairs are made or service provided in enclosed bays and no vehicles are stored overnight. This classification excludes disassembly, removal or replacement of major components such as engines, drive trains, transmissions or axles; automotive body and fender work, vehicle painting or other operations that generate excessive noise, objectionable odors, or hazardous materials, and repair of heavy trucks, limousines or construction vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Major). It also excludes towing services (see Towing and Impound) and fueling stations (see Service Station).
F. Rental Car Storage. Parking or storage of operable motor vehicles for rental car agencies, leasing agencies, or any company or business engaged in the rental or leasing of motor vehicles, where more than 30 percent of annual rental transactions relating to those parked or stored motor vehicles occurs off site.
G. Service Station. Establishments primarily engaged in retailing automotive fuels or retailing these fuels in combination with activities, such as providing minor automobile/vehicle repair services; selling automotive oils, replacement parts, and accessories; and/or providing food services.
H. Towing and Impound. Establishments primarily engaged in seizing and retaining vehicles, in addition to parking associated towing vehicles.
Banks and Financial Institutions.A. Banks and Credit Unions. Financial institutions, including Federally-chartered banks, savings associations, industrial loan companies, and credit unions that provide retail banking services to individuals and businesses. This classification includes only those institutions engaged in the on-site circulation of money, and whose deposits are insured by the State or Federal government and/or a State or Federal sponsored entity, including credit unions. This classification specifically excludes other financial services.
B. Other Financial Services. Other financial services are business establishments that provide customers with some form of currency in a transaction as part of an alternative loan product. This use classification may include check cashing, payday loans, vehicle title loans, microfinance loans, or similar. This use classification specifically excludes banks and credit unions.
1. Alternative Loan Businesses. Establishments that conduct a check cashing business, and/or engage in the business of cashing checks, warrants, drafts, money orders, or other commercial enterprise defined herein. The term “check cashing business” as used herein includes a retail business owned or operated by a “check casher” as that term is defined in California Civil Code Section
1789.31, as amended from time to time. This classification also includes the business of deferred deposits, or “payday lending,” which is defined as an establishment owned or operated by a “licensee,” as that term is defined in California Financial Code Section
23001(d), as amended from time to time. Similar lending services that provide vehicle title loans or microfinance loans shall also be included in this classification. Microfinance institutions are characterized by their use of interest rates that are higher than traditional banks and credit unions and typically targeted towards low-income borrowers or borrowers with limited or no credit history. Alternative loan businesses do not include State or federally chartered banks, savings associations, credit unions, or industrial loan companies (see Banks and Credit Unions). They also do not include retail sellers engaged primarily in the business of selling consumer goods, such as consumables to retail buyers, that cash checks or issue money orders incidental to their main purpose or business.
2. Pawnbroker. Place of business where personal property is received and for which money is advanced, with the right of privilege granted to the person to whom said money is advanced to reclaim such property upon repayment of said money, together with all legal charges incident thereto. This does not include Banks and Credit Unions.
Building Materials Sales and Services.Retail sales or rental of building supplies or equipment. This classification includes lumber yards, tool and equipment sales or rental establishments, and establishments devoted principally to taxable retail sales to individuals for their own use. This definition does not include Construction and Material Yards and hardware stores less than 10,000 square feet in floor area (see Retail Sales) or plant nurseries (see Nurseries and Garden Centers).
Business Services.Establishments that primarily provide goods and services to other businesses on a fee or contract basis, including printing and copying, blueprint services, advertising and mailing, equipment rental and leasing, office security, custodial services, photo finishing, and model building.
Commercial Cannabis Uses.Includes the cultivation, possession, manufacture, distribution, processing, storing, laboratory testing, packaging, labeling, transportation, delivery, or sale of cannabis and cannabis products.
A. Cannabis Delivery-Only Operations. A commercial cannabis use that involves the transfer of cannabis or cannabis products from a fixed location that is not open to the public to a customer at a fixed address specified by the customer pursuant to the applicable state cannabis license.
C. Cannabis Indoor Cultivation. The cultivation of cannabis for commercial purposes within a fully enclosed, permanent, secure structure. Indoor commercial cannabis cultivation only includes cultivation that exclusively uses artificial lighting as licensed pursuant to State law. For the purposes of this chapter, indoor commercial cultivation does not include cultivation that is legally conducted pursuant to federally-regulated scientific research (see Research and Development).
D. Cannabis Manufacturing. Producing, preparing, propagating, blending, or compounding cannabis or cannabis products either directly or indirectly or by extraction methods, infusion methods, or independently by means of chemical synthesis, or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis at a fixed location that packages or repackages cannabis or cannabis products, or labels or re-labels its container, or otherwise making or preparing cannabis products.
E. Cannabis Testing. Performing scientific analysis of cannabis or cannabis products to determine its chemical profile, the presence of contaminants, or other similar scientific or compositional information as a commercial enterprise.
Commercial Entertainment and Recreation.The Commercial Entertainment and Recreation use type refers to establishments or places of business primarily engaged in the provision of sports, entertainment, or recreation for participants or spectators. The following are Commercial Entertainment and Recreation use types:
A. Indoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses conducted within an enclosed building. Typical uses include movie theaters, arcades, meeting halls, video game activities and competitions such as e-sports, and dance halls.
B. Indoor Sports and Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted within an enclosed building. Typical uses include bowling alleys, billiard parlors, ice and roller skating rinks, indoor racquetball courts, athletic clubs, and physical fitness centers. Excludes operations where activities are primarily class- or appointment-based such as yoga studios and personal trainers (see Instructional Services).
C. Outdoor Entertainment. Predominantly spectator uses conducted open or in partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include sports arenas, racing facilities, and amusement parks.
D. Outdoor Sports and Recreation. Predominantly participant sports conducted in open or partially enclosed or screened facilities. Typical uses include driving ranges, miniature golf courses, golf courses, swimming pools, marinas, and tennis courts.
Crop Production, Limited.Use of land for agricultural production, vine or tree farm, truck garden, apiary, horticulture, vineyard, hopyard, and associated crop preparation and harvesting activities or any other type of agriculture determined to be substantially similar to the above. This use does not include nurseries and greenhouses (see Nurseries and Garden Centers), processing (see Food Preparation), or retail sales of agricultural products from the site (see Retail Sales, General).
Eating and Drinking Establishments.Businesses primarily engaged in serving prepared food and/or beverages for consumption on or off the premises.
A. Bar/Night Club/Lounge. Businesses serving beverages for consumption on the premises as a primary use and including on-sale service of alcohol including beer, wine, and mixed drinks.
B. Coffee Shop/Café. Establishments that primarily serve beverages, such as coffee, juices or sodas for consumption on or near the premises, or a specialty snack, such as ice cream, frozen yogurt, cookies or popcorn.
C. Restaurant, Full Service. Restaurants providing food and beverage services to patrons who order and are served while seated and pay after eating. Takeout service may be provided.
D. Restaurant, Limited Service. Establishments where food and beverages may be consumed on the premises, taken out, or delivered, but where no table service is provided. This classification includes cafeterias, fast-food restaurants, carryout sandwich shops, limited-service pizza parlors and delivery shops, self-service restaurants, snack bars and takeout restaurants. This classification also includes catering businesses or bakeries that have a storefront retail component.
Food and Beverage Sales.Retail sales of food and beverages for off-site preparation and consumption. Typical uses include food markets, convenience markets, grocery stores, liquor stores, and retail bakeries.
A. Convenience Market. Retail establishments that sell a limited line of groceries, prepackaged food items, tobacco, magazines, and other household goods, primarily for off-premise consumption and typically with long or late hours of operation and in a building that is less than 5,000 gross square feet. This classification includes small retail stores located on the same parcel as or operated in conjunction with a service station but does not include specialty food shops.
B. Grocery Store. Retail establishments that primarily sell food, but also may sell other convenience and household goods, and could include a delicatessen or specialty food shop, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, dairy, and prepared food, and which occupy at least 5,000 square feet dedicated to sales, but not more than 25,000 square feet of gross floor area.
C. Supermarket. Retail establishments that primarily sell food, but also may sell other convenience and household goods, and could include a delicatessen or specialty food shop, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, dairy, and prepared food, and which occupy more than 25,000 square feet of gross floor area, but not more than 80,000 square feet of gross floor area.
Funeral Parlor and Mortuary.An establishment primarily engaged in the provision of services involving the care, preparation, or disposition of the human remains and conducting memorial services. Typical uses include a crematory, columbarium, mausoleum, or mortuary.
Home Occupation.A commercial use conducted on residential property by the inhabitants of the subject residence, which is incidental and secondary to the residential use of the dwelling. See Section
20.350.023 ("Home Occupations").
Lodging.An establishment providing overnight accommodations to transient patrons for payment for periods of 30 consecutive calendar days or less.
A. Bed and Breakfast. A residential structure that is in residential use with one or more bedrooms dedicated for rental for overnight lodging and where meals may be provided. This use type specifically excludes Short-Term Vacation Rental (see Short-Term Vacation Rental).
B. Hotel and Motel. An establishment providing overnight lodging to transient patrons. These establishments may provide additional services, such as conference and meeting rooms, restaurants, bars, or recreation facilities available to guests or to the general public. This classification includes motor lodges, motels, hostels, extended-stay hotels, and tourist courts, but does not include rooming houses, boarding houses, private residential clubs (see Group Residential), or Bed and Breakfast establishments within a single-unit dwelling.
C. Short-Term Vacation Rental. A single-unit dwelling that is rented to a transient occupant for a period of 30 days or less. The full single-unit dwelling, or a portion of it, can be rented to a transient occupant in a short-term vacation rental use. This classification includes both hosted rentals (the primary resident, or host, is present in the dwelling unit that is being used as a short-term vacation rental) and non-hosted rentals (the host is not present in the dwelling unit that is being used as a short-term vacation rental).
Maintenance and Repair Services.Establishments engaged in the maintenance or repair of office machines, household appliances, furniture, and similar items. This classification excludes maintenance and repair of vehicles or boats (see Automotive/Vehicle Sales and Services) and personal apparel (see Personal Services).
Maker’s Space.A workspace for an artist or artisan or for a group of artists or artisans practicing an applied art or craft. Production involves only the use of hand tools or small mechanical equipment. Typical uses include jewelry-making, pottery and ceramic studios with a kiln, glassblowing, metalworking, woodworking, and other arts with some associated impacts related to odors, fumes, noise, particulate matter emissions, or other disturbances. May include incidental direct sale to consumers of only those goods produced on site. For uses with no associated impacts, see Artist’s Studio.
Mobile Vendor Services.A self-contained truck or trailer or non-motorized push cart that is readily movable without disassembling, and is used to sell merchandise, prepare and serve food and beverages, or provide other services. All food sold must be prepared on site.
Nurseries and Garden Centers.Establishments primarily engaged in retailing nursery and garden products—such as trees, shrubs, plants, seeds, bulbs, and sod—that are predominantly grown elsewhere. These establishments may sell a limited amount of a product they grow themselves. Fertilizer and soil products are stored and sold in package form only. This classification includes wholesale and retail nurseries offering plants for sale.
Offices.Offices of firms or organizations providing professional, executive, management, administrative or design services, such as accounting, architectural, computer software design, engineering, graphic design, interior design, investment, and legal offices, excluding banks, and savings and loan associations (see Banks and Financial Institutions). This classification also includes offices where medical and dental services are provided by physicians, dentists, chiropractors, optometrists, and similar medical professionals, including medical/dental laboratories within medical office buildings but excluding clinics or independent research laboratory facilities and hospitals (see Hospitals and Clinics).
A. Business and Professional. Offices of firms or organizations providing professional, executive, management, or administrative services, such as accounting, architectural, computer software design, engineering, graphic design, interior design, legal offices and tax preparations offices.
B. Medical and Dental. Office use providing consultation, diagnosis, therapeutic, preventive, or corrective personal treatment services by doctors, dentists, medical and dental laboratories, and similar practitioners of medical and healing arts for humans licensed for such practice by the State of California. Incidental medical and/or dental research within the office is considered part of the office use, where it supports the on-site patient services.
C. Walk-In Clientele. An office business providing direct services to patrons or clients that may or may not require appointments. This use type includes employment agencies, insurance agent offices, real estate offices, travel agencies, utility company offices and offices for elected officials. It does not include banks (see Banks and Credit Unions) or check-cashing facilities (see Other Financial Services).
Parking Services.Surface lots and structures offering parking to the public with or without a fee when such use is not considered accessory parking to another activity or use.
A. Commercial Parking. Privately owned or operated surface lots and structures offering parking to the public with or without a fee. Commercial parking facilities provide parking that is not considered accessory parking to a specific use.
B. Public Parking. City-owned and operated surface lots and structures offering parking to the public with or without a fee.
Personal Services.A. General Personal Services. Provision of recurrently needed services of a personal nature. This classification includes barber and beauty shops, nail salons, personal trainers, spa/wellness center, seamstresses, tailors, dry cleaning drop-off/pick up (excluding cleaning plants, see Industry, Limited), shoe repair shops, self-service laundries, photocopying and photo finishing services, and travel agencies mainly intended for the consumer.
B. Instructional Services. An establishment that offers specialized programs in personal growth and development such as music, martial arts, photography, vocal, fitness, yoga, dancing, and academic tutoring. Attendance is typically limited to hourly classes rather than full-day instruction. These establishments do not grant diplomas or degrees, though instruction could provide credits for diplomas or degrees granted by other institutions. Retail sales are permitted as an accessory use.
C. Massage Business. Any business that offers massage therapy in exchange for compensation, whether at a fixed place of business or at a location designated by the customer or client through outcall massage services. Also includes businesses that offer any combination of massage therapy and bath facilities, including, but not limited to, showers, baths, wet and dry heat rooms, pools and hot tubs. The term “massage business” includes a certified massage practitioner who is the sole owner, operator and employee of a massage business operating as a sole proprietorship. Exempted from this definition are physicians, surgeons, chiropractors, osteopaths, nurses or any physical therapists who are duly licensed to practice their respective professions in the State of California and persons working directly under the supervision of or at the direction of such licensed persons, working at the same location as the licensed person, and administering massage services subject to review or oversight by the licensed person.
D. Tattoo or Body Modification Parlor. An establishment whose principal business activity is one or more of the following: (1) using ink or other substances that result in the permanent coloration of the skin through the use of needles or other instruments designed to contact or puncture the skin; or (2) creation of an opening in the body of a person for the purpose of inserting jewelry or other decoration.
Retail Sales.A. General Sales. The retail sale or rental of merchandise not specifically listed under another use classification. This classification includes retail establishments with 80,000 square feet or less of sales area; including department stores, clothing stores, furniture stores, pet supply stores, small hardware stores (with 10,000 square feet or less of floor area), and businesses retailing the following goods: toys, hobby materials, handcrafted items, jewelry, cameras, photographic supplies and services (including portraiture and retail photo processing), medical supplies and equipment, pharmacies, electronic equipment, records, sporting goods, kitchen utensils, hardware, appliances, antiques, art galleries, art supplies and services, paint and wallpaper, carpeting and floor covering, office supplies, bicycles, video rental, and new automotive parts and accessories (excluding vehicle service and installation, see Automobile/Vehicle Service and Repair, Major and Minor). Retail sales may be combined with other services such as office machine, computer, electronics, and similar small-item repairs.
B. Firearm Sales. An establishment engaged in selling, dealing in, trading, transferring, or storing of firearms and ammunition.
C. Large Format Retail. Retail establishments over 80,000 square feet in size that sell merchandise and/or bulk goods primarily for individual consumption, including, but not limited to, department stores, home improvement stores, membership warehouses which emphasize bulk sales to the general public as well as to other businesses, and other big box format stores. Large format retail uses may include a limited (5,000 square feet or less) grocery store sales component. This use type specifically excludes Superstores (see Superstore).
D. Off-Price Merchandise. Retail establishments that sell a variety of overstock, off-season, or defective goods, including “99 cent” and “dollar” stores.
E. Outdoor Market. Any indoor or outdoor place, in an approved location, or for an approved activity where new or used goods or secondhand personal property is offered for sale or exchange to the general public by a multitude of individual licensed vendors, usually in compartmentalized spaces. The term swap meet is interchangeable with and applicable to: flea markets, auctions, open air markets, farmers markets, or other similarly named or labeled activities; but the term does not include the usual supermarket (see Grocery Store or Supermarket) or department store retail operations (see Retail, General Sales).
F. Second Hand Store. A retail establishment that buys and sells used products that may include clothing, furniture and household goods, jewelry, household appliances, musical instruments, business machines and office equipment, hand tools, and similar items. This use does not include bookstores, antique stores (see Retail, General Sales), junk dealers, scrap/dismantling yards, sale of used cars or other vehicles (see Automobile/Vehicle Sales and Leasing), or pawn shops (see Pawnbroker).
G. Superstore. Retail establishments (over 80,000 square feet of sales area) that serve as a one-stop shopping destination by offering a wide variety of goods and merchandise, often at a discounted price. They are distinguished by their size, and by the inclusion of grocery sales. Superstores typically feature a full-service food and beverage retail sales area that exceeds 5,000 square feet of the gross floor area, and could include a delicatessen, baked goods, frozen foods, fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, dairy, and prepared food. A superstore may also feature various business centers, such as a bank, pharmacy, vision center, pet center, photo center, and prepared food outlet(s).
Shopping Center.Cluster of retail stores that provide off-street parking. Shopping centers are classified as community, neighborhood and regional centers.
A. Community Shopping Center. A shopping center greater than or equal to 100,000 and less than 400,000 square feet of gross floor area, capable of supporting two or more retail or commercial businesses. May include anchor tenants such as a discount department store and other outlets such as grocery, clothing, or furniture stores. Larger than a neighborhood center, but smaller than a regional center.
B. Neighborhood Shopping Center. A shopping center generally between 30,000 and less than 100,000 square feet of gross floor area, typically anchored by a grocery store, providing goods for day-to-day living and personal services. May include food, pharmancy, laundry and dry cleaner, beauty parlor and shoe repair.
C. Regional Shopping Center. A shopping center generally totaling 400,000 square feet or more of gross floor area, typically anchored by three or more anchor stores and a number of retail outlets. May include full-line department stores, supermarket, a bank and a pharmacy.
(Ord. 1646 § 2, 2022; Ord. 1649, 10/11/2023; Ord. 1656, 6/12/2024; Ord. 1677-2025, 9/10/2025)