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California Pool Fence Requirements, Explained

What California's Swimming Pool Safety Act means for your fence: 60-inch barriers, gap limits, self-closing gates, and the 7 safety features. Plain-English 2026 guide for LA & OC homeowners.

Updated July 2026By SoCal Fence Pros

If you're building or remodeling a pool in California, state law — the Swimming Pool Safety Act — requires drowning-prevention safety features, and an enclosure (a pool fence) is the one virtually every family chooses first. Here's what the rules actually mean for your fence, in plain English.

The short version: 60-inch minimum barrier, tight gaps, and a self-closing, self-latching gate that opens away from the pool with a high latch. Aluminum "puppy-picket" fencing is popular precisely because it meets all of this out of the box.

The 7 approved safety features

For new or remodeled residential pools, California requires at least two of these seven drowning-prevention measures:

  1. An enclosure (fence/barrier) isolating the pool from the home
  2. Removable mesh fencing meeting ASTM standards, with a self-closing, self-latching gate
  3. An approved pool safety cover
  4. Exit alarms on doors leading to the pool
  5. Self-closing, self-latching devices on those doors (release 54"+ high)
  6. A pool alarm that detects entry into the water
  7. Other means of protection affording equal or greater safety

A permanent fence enclosure is the feature inspectors, insurers, and parents trust most — and unlike alarms and covers, it works even when nobody remembers to arm it.

What a compliant pool fence looks like

  • Height: minimum 60 inches from the outside ground level
  • Ground clearance: no more than 2 inches under the fence
  • Openings: nothing a 4-inch sphere can pass through
  • Climbability: no handholds/footholds; closely spaced horizontal rails belong on the pool side
  • Gate: self-closing, self-latching, opens away from the pool, latch release mounted high (commonly 54"+)

Cities and counties can add their own amendments on top of state law — LA and OC cities often do. We build to your city's exact standard and always recommend confirming final requirements with your local building department.

Need a pool fence that passes inspection the first time?

We install code-compliant aluminum pool enclosures with self-closing, self-latching gates across LA & Orange County.

Why aluminum is the go-to pool fence

Pool environments are brutal: splash, chlorine or salt systems, sprinklers, sun. Powder-coated aluminum can't rust, meets the 60-inch and gap rules with standard "puppy-picket" panels, takes code-ready gate hardware, and looks clean around the water for decades. Vinyl works well where full privacy matters; wood is the weakest choice within splash range.

Related reading: Aluminum fences & pool enclosures · What a fence costs in LA & OC · Gates & openers

Good to know

Frequently asked questions

How tall does a pool fence need to be in California?

The commonly enforced standard for residential pool barriers is a minimum of 60 inches (5 feet), with no more than a 2-inch gap under the fence and no openings that allow a 4-inch sphere to pass through. Your city may add its own amendments, so always confirm locally.

Does my pool gate have to be self-closing?

Yes — pool barrier gates must be self-closing and self-latching, open away from the pool, and have the latch release mounted high (commonly 54 inches or more above grade) so small children can't reach it.

Is a pool fence required for existing pools?

The Swimming Pool Safety Act's drowning-prevention requirements apply when a pool is built or remodeled. Many insurers and cities expect barriers on existing pools too — and as a practical matter, it's the single best drowning-prevention measure you can add.

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