Title 24 Solar Requirements in Alameda County, California

Every newly constructed detached ADU in Alameda County, California must include a Title 24-compliant solar PV system. Alameda County spans climate zones 3, 4, which determines exactly how many kilowatts your specific project must install for code compliance.

How Title 24 Applies Countywide

Local building departments across Alameda County enforce Title 24 at plan check. Plans submitted without a properly sized solar system are routinely rejected unless a documented exemption (shading, roof area, structural) applies.

Alameda County's diverse communities from Oakland to the Tri-Valley are actively building ADUs. East Bay Community Energy provides clean energy options that complement solar installations.

Alameda County Sizing Snapshot

Title 24 multiplies your ADU's conditioned floor area by a climate-zone-specific kW factor. Across Alameda County's climate zones 3, 4, most ADUs land in the 1.6–4.0 kW range — typically 4 to 10 modern (~400W) panels.

  • 400–600 sq ft ADU: ~1.6–2.4 kW (4–6 panels)
  • 600–900 sq ft ADU: ~2.4–3.2 kW (6–8 panels)
  • 900–1,200 sq ft ADU: ~3.2–4.0 kW (8–10 panels)

Cost Across Alameda County

Title 24-compliant ADU solar packages range from $4,000 (Standard cash) to $15,000+ (Premium with battery) across Alameda County. HDM financing typically reduces effective cost by ~40% via commercial ITC pass-through. Main utilities serving the county: PG&E, EBCE.

FAQs

Do all Alameda County cities enforce Title 24?

Yes. Title 24 is California state law and every jurisdiction in Alameda County enforces it at permit submittal.

What climate zone is my city in?

Alameda County sits in climate zones 3, 4. Use our cost calculator to map your exact ZIP code to its Title 24 climate zone.

Are there countywide ADU solar exemptions?

Exemptions are project-specific, not countywide. The most common are shading (<70% annual solar access), insufficient roof area, and structural infeasibility. Your designer documents these on the CF1R compliance form.

Alameda County