Potrero
ADU Pass helps homeowners in Potrero, San Diego County, California navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 1 ZIP code.
Map
ADU details
ADU legality: allowed-with-restrictions
Allowed by-right ministerial under state law via County PDS. The defining constraints in Potrero are physical, not legal: Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone exposure across most of the CDP (CalFire-mapped State Responsibility Area), CRC Chapter 7A wildfire-resistant construction triggers, individual on-site septic system requirements administered by County DEHQ, well-water reliability (no public water utility serves the CDP), 4-ft mandatory rear setback for ADUs in VHFHSZ, and the 2007 Harris Fire reset event which originated at Harris Ranch Road in Potrero and burned 90,440 acres before being contained.
Cost scenarios
| Scenario | Sq ft | Permit | Build | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| minimum | 150 | $6,500 | $64,500 | $71,000 |
| 600 | 600 | $7,300 | $258,000 | $265,300 |
| midpoint | 675 | $7,300 | $290,250 | $297,550 |
| 1000 | 1,000 | $18,500 | $430,000 | $448,500 |
| maximum | 1,200 | $22,000 | $516,000 | $538,000 |
Fee breakdown (as of 2026-04)
Permitting process
Viability (permitted uses)
- Long-term rental: yes Long-term rental of an ADU is explicitly permitted under County PDS ordinance and state law. AB 976 (2024) precludes any owner-occupancy enforcement on detached ADUs.
- Short-term rental: with-restrictions San Diego County permits short-term rentals in unincorporated areas including Potrero, but requires a Short-Term Residential Occupancy (STRO) license through County PDS. ADUs are eligible. STRO licensing costs and Transient Occupancy Tax registration apply. Cross-border tourism via Tecate POE (~2 miles south) is a potential STR demand source but is highly weather- and security-event sensitive.
- Office rental: no ADUs are residential by definition; office-only use to outside tenants would require rezoning.
- Home office: yes Owner home occupation permitted under County zoning home-occupation provisions.
- Studio / workshop: yes Personal artist studio / workshop use is consistent with residential occupancy.
- Agriculture: yes Most Potrero parcels are zoned RR (Rural Residential) or A70 (Limited Agriculture) per the Potrero Community Plan, which expressly permit small-scale agriculture, equine, and limited livestock under County animal-keeping standards.
- Relative support: yes Family occupancy of an ADU or JADU is explicitly permitted; JADUs require owner occupancy of one of the units (primary or JADU) per state law. Multi-generational household pattern is common in Potrero (avg household size 3.6 per 2020 census, vs ~2.7 statewide).
Incentives
Pre-approved plans Pre-approved plans
Contacts
Utilities
- Water: No public water utility serves Potrero. All parcels rely on private wells permitted by County DEHQ. The Potrero Community Plan documents that no imported water is or will be available. Well construction by C-57 licensed drillers; County DEHQ well permit + percolation testing required. · 60d connect · $11,000
- Sewer: No public sewer service in Potrero. Individual on-site septic system required for all parcels, permitted and inspected by County of San Diego Department of Environmental Health & Quality (DEHQ) — Land Use / Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems program. Tank upsize, leach-field expansion, or full system replacement may be required for ADUs depending on existing-system capacity. Border-proximate parcels may face heightened groundwater-protection review. · 60d connect · $13,500
- Electric: San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) · 45d connect · $5,200
- Gas: Almost all Potrero parcels are off the SDG&E natural-gas main and rely on propane (LPG) tanks delivered by Suburban Propane, AmeriGas, or Ferrellgas serving the SR-94 border corridor. A few parcels in the village core may have natural gas access; verify with SDG&E. · 21d connect · $3,700
Property values & taxes
Construction timeline
Realistic total: best 13mo · typical 18mo · worst 30mo
Modular pathway inspectors are occasional with modular
Financing
State ADU loans:
Insurance impact
Potrero's VHFHSZ classification (entrenched by the 2007 Harris Fire that ignited in the CDP itself) has driven most admitted-market insurers (State Farm, Allstate, Travelers) to non-renew policies in the area since 2022. California FAIR Plan dwelling fire coverage (capped at $3M dwelling) is the primary fallback, paired with non-admitted Difference in Conditions (DIC) wraps for liability and personal property. Premium delta for adding an ADU is the FAIR Plan dwelling-coverage premium for the new structure ($800-$2,500/year typical) plus DIC liability uplift.
HOA prevalence & preemption
Potrero has essentially no HOA prevalence — almost all parcels are fee-simple rural residential with no governing HOA. There are no clustered subdivisions of meaningful size in the CDP. California's AB 670 / AB 3182 (Civil Code §§ 4740 / 4741) preempts any HOA ban on ADUs.
Regulatory overlays (4)
- wui-fire-zone
Most of the Potrero CDP is in a CalFire State Responsibility Area Very-High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (VHFHSZ). Triggers full CRC Chapter 7A wildfire-resistant construction (ignition-resistant cladding, ember-resistant vents, Class A roofing, multi-pane tempered glazing) and Public Resources Code §4291 defensible-space requirements (100-ft cleared zone). Insurance non-renewals from admitted carriers are routine. The 2007 Harris Fire ignited at Harris Ranch Road in Potrero and burned 90,440 acres. - wetland-overlay
Potrero Creek and Cottonwood Creek tributaries traverse the CDP. The City of San Diego owns water-supply land in nearby Marron Valley around Lower Otay Reservoir; County Resource Protection Ordinance riparian setbacks and US Army Corps of Engineers §404 jurisdiction may apply for ADUs near drainages. - seismic-retrofit-zone
Seismic Design Category D2 per ASCE 7 (Elsinore Fault Zone proximity, Laguna Salada Fault to the south). New construction including ADUs designed under CRC seismic provisions; soft-story retrofit not commonly an issue for new detached ADUs. - other
US-Mexico border proximity (Tecate POE ~2 miles south): U.S. Border Patrol activity, occasional border-related traffic and access disruptions, and CBP Roving Patrol presence on SR-94. Cleveland National Forest borders the CDP to the north. State Route 94 is the only access route west to El Cajon (~50 minutes); no alternative paved route in event of road closure.
Technical envelope (climate & building code)
Climate & energy code
Building code
Amendments:
- Amendment
- Amendment
Legal history (timeline)
Current ordinance: San Diego County Code of Regulatory Ordinances Title 6 — Zoning Ordinance, ADU/JADU sections (administered for Potrero CDP via County PDS), adopted 2020-10-21, last amended 2026-03-04
- 2007-10-21 — Harris Fire ignition at Harris Ranch Road, Potrero (other)
The Harris Fire ignited at Harris Ranch Road in the town of Potrero, near the U.S.-Mexico border about 5 miles north of Tecate. It traveled in a northwest direction and ultimately burned 90,440 acres before being contained on November 5, 2007. The fire killed 8 people and burned through Potrero, Jamul, Dulzura, and Tecate California, also crossing into northern Mexico near Tecate.
Effect: Potrero became one of the most cited reset events for VHFHSZ classification along the southern San Diego County border corridor. The Harris Fire footprint forced County PDS and CalFire to maintain Very-High FHSZ designations across the CDP, locking in CRC Chapter 7A wildfire materials and Public Resources Code §4291 defensible-space requirements for all subsequent dwelling and ADU permits. - 2007-12-11 — Potrero Community Planning Group recall election (Blackwater controversy) (other)
All five members of the Potrero Community Planning Group who had approved a 2007 Blackwater USA proposal for a paramilitary weapons training facility lost their seats in a recall election. Blackwater withdrew its application in March 2008.
Effect: The recall reset the CPG composition and triggered an extended series of weekly Potrero Planning Group meetings to redraft the Potrero Community Plan. The current ADU permit-review posture of the CPG, including its scrutiny of conditional-use applications and large-footprint development, traces to the post-recall deliberative pattern. - 2010-10-20 — Potrero Community Plan update (Mountain Empire Subregional Plan) (city-ordinance)
County BOS adopted the updated Potrero Community Plan as part of the Mountain Empire Subregional Plan adopted with the General Plan Update. The CPG-led drafting process started 2008-06-18 with a subcommittee specifically chartered to redraft the Potrero plan after the Blackwater experience.
Effect: Locked in the rural-residential land-use pattern with limited village commercial along SR-94, expressly noting the absence of imported water, the predominance of individual septic systems, and the constrained access via two-lane SR-94 to El Cajon (~50 minutes) and Tecate POE (~2 miles south). - 2020-10-21 — San Diego County Ord. 10693 — first ADU conformance amendment (city-ordinance)
County PDS amended the County Zoning Ordinance to conform to the 2019-2020 California ADU statute package (AB 68, AB 881, SB 13, AB 670).
Effect: Established ministerial 60-day approval, removed owner-occupancy requirement, codified state-default 850/1000 sqft size caps, and imposed the SB 13 impact-fee waiver under 750 sqft for unincorporated parcels including Potrero. - 2023-12-13 — San Diego County Ord. 10749 — second ADU conformance amendment (SB 897 / AB 2221 / AB 976 / AB 1033) (city-ordinance)
County PDS comprehensive update conforming to the 2022-2024 California ADU statute package.
Effect: Permanently removed owner-occupancy enforcement (AB 976), standardized 16-ft height baseline with multi-story exceptions, opened ADU condo-conversion pathway (AB 1033) but deferred adoption to 2026, and clarified rear-setback rules: 0-ft for small detached ADUs outside VHFHSZ, 4-ft mandatory in VHFHSZ — the rule that effectively governs every Potrero parcel. - 2026-03-04 — San Diego County AB 1033 condo-conversion adoption (city-ordinance)
County BOS adopted the AB 1033 ADU-condo-conversion pathway, allowing Potrero owners to subdivide and sell ADUs as condominium units separate from the primary dwelling.
Effect: Opened a financing and exit pathway not previously available; implementation requires CC&R recording with the County Recorder. Resale velocity is low in the predominantly Hispanic / Latino (81.9% per 2020 census) Potrero submarket, so AB 1033 uptake is expected to be limited.
Known issues (4)
- other — Potrero's VHFHSZ status (reinforced by the 2007 Harris Fire ignition within the CDP itself) has triggered widespread admitted-market insurance non-renewals since 2022; new ADU construction faces FAIR Plan + DIC wrap as the typical insurance path, which may complicate Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac financing requiring full-replacement insurance.
- other — No public water utility serves Potrero — all parcels rely on private wells. County DEHQ well-yield draw-down testing is non-optional for ADUs over 750 sqft and recommended for any new ADU. Drilled-well capacity issues are the second most common gating constraint after septic capacity.
- other — Single-route access via SR-94 (no alternative paved route west to El Cajon, ~50 min via narrow mountain road) makes mobilization scheduling sensitive to border-corridor disruption events. Contractor lead times average ~9 months reflecting the small Potrero/SR-94-corridor specialist pool.
- policy-review — AB 1033 condo-conversion pathway adopted by County in March 2026 is too new to have a track record; early Potrero projects will face uncertain CC&R recording timelines and County Recorder mapping fees that haven't yet been benchmarked, and the local resale market depth may not support condo conversion as a financing strategy.
San Diego County — county ADU rules and overlays
County ADU ordinance
San Diego County regulates ADUs on parcels in the unincorporated county under Title 6 of the County Code (Zoning Ordinance), Sections 6156.x. The county's ADU framework layers on top of California Government Code sections 65852.2 (ADU) and 65852.22 (JADU), which preempt many local standards statewide; the county ordinance fills in the locally-controlled parameters (setbacks, design standards, parking in non-transit unincorporated areas, fire-safe design in VHFHSZ) that state law leaves to local choice. The current ordinance reflects amendments adopted 2020 (Ord. No. 10693) and 2023 (Ord. No. 10749) to conform with AB 68 / AB 881 (2019), AB 976 (2019 owner-occupancy elimination through 2024), SB 13 (2019 fee reductions), AB 2221 / SB 897 (2022 design/permit clarifications), and AB 1033 (2023 condo-ADU optional program; San Diego County has not opted into AB 1033 condo separation as of 2026-04-20). The county permits up to one ADU plus one JADU per single-family parcel by right, and the state-mandated two ADUs per multifamily lot; parking is not required on ADUs within 1/2 mile of transit. The county's distinct contributions on top of state law are the fire-hardening / defensible-space design standards for ADUs sited in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones, the airport-noise compatibility review for ADUs within Airport Land Use Compatibility Plan (ALUCP) zones, and the Coastal Development Permit (CDP) requirement for ADUs in the county's certified Local Coastal Program (LCP) jurisdiction.
- San Diego County Code of Regulatory Ordinances Title 6 (Zoning) — Accessory Dwelling Unit provisions
- PDS ADU Technical Bulletin and applicant handouts
- Ordinance No. 10693 — 2020 ADU ordinance conforming to AB 68 / AB 881 / SB 13
- Ordinance No. 10749 (approximate) — 2023 ADU ordinance update for AB 2221 / SB 897 / AB 1033
State-floor overlay: California state law (Gov. Code 65852.2, 65852.22) preempts most local ADU regulation. The state sets ministerial-approval requirements, caps fees, mandates 60-day permit review, forbids local owner-occupancy requirements through 2024 (extended effectively through AB 976 / subsequent amendments), sets minimum allowed sizes (850 sqft one-bedroom, 1000 sqft two-bedroom), forbids parking requirements within 1/2 mile of transit or on replacement-covered-parking ADUs, and caps impact fees at zero for ADUs under 750 sqft. San Diego County's ordinance reiterates and applies these floors, adding only the locally-controlled fire, airport, and coastal overlays. Where a project is in a VHFHSZ or coastal-commission jurisdiction, state ADU preemption still applies to the ADU allowance itself but does not preempt the county's separate fire and coastal authority over site-design standards.
County regulatory overlays
San Diego County administers or co-administers several overlay regimes that materially affect ADU siting on unincorporated parcels: (1) the California Coastal Commission's jurisdiction along the coastal zone (a narrow band up to 5 miles inland in some places), implemented through the county's certified Local Coastal Program (LCP) covering unincorporated coastal segments; (2) Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ) designated by CAL FIRE and reviewed by the State Board of Forestry, which cover very large portions of the unincorporated back-country and drive defensible-space, ignition-resistant-construction, and access requirements; (3) FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA) along the San Diego River, San Dieguito River, San Luis Rey River, Otay River, Sweetwater River, Tijuana River, and associated coastal zones; and (4) Airport Land Use Compatibility Plans (ALUCP) administered by the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority's Airport Land Use Commission around MCAS Miramar (federal military), NAS North Island / Naval Outlying Landing Field Imperial Beach (federal military), Gillespie Field (Santee, county-owned), McClellan-Palomar (Carlsbad, county-owned), Brown Field (Otay Mesa, City of San Diego), Montgomery-Gibbs Executive (Kearny Mesa, City of San Diego), Ramona Airport (county-owned), Fallbrook Community Airpark (county-owned), Oceanside Municipal, and Jacumba Airport. Seismic-retrofit overlays are not a county-administered regime in San Diego (unlike parts of Los Angeles / San Francisco); California seismic building-code compliance applies statewide through the California Building Code adopted by the county.
- California Coastal Commission / County Local Coastal Program (LCP) — The county's LCP covers the unincorporated coastal segments near Del Mar Mesa, Torrey Pines extensions, Crest / Harmony Grove (tributary areas), and the Camp Pendleton / Oceanside boundary. An ADU within the coastal zone requires a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) unless categorically excluded; most single detached ADUs qualify for an Administrative CDP (noticed but ministerial-like) while those in sensitive-biological or visually-sensitive settings may require a heard CDP. The Coastal Commission retains appeal jurisdiction over county CDPs within the defined appeals area. State law (Gov. Code 65852.2(j)) preserves the CDP requirement for ADUs in the coastal zone notwithstanding the otherwise-ministerial state ADU framework.
- CAL FIRE / State Board of Forestry Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ) and County Fire Code — Very large portions of unincorporated San Diego County — most of the East County back-country including Julian, Warner Springs, Descanso, Pine Valley, Jacumba, Campo, Boulevard, Dulzura, Potrero, Palomar Mountain, Cuyamaca, and the San Diego / Cleveland National Forest interface — are designated VHFHSZ in either the State Responsibility Area (SRA) or the county's Local Responsibility Area (LRA). An ADU in a VHFHSZ must comply with California Building Code Chapter 7A (WUI-rated exterior materials: ignition-resistant siding, dual-pane windows, 1/8-inch-max vent screens, Class A roofing, non-combustible eaves / soffits / decks), minimum 100-foot defensible-space per Pub. Res. Code 4291, minimum driveway width and turnaround per fire-district standards, and minimum fire-flow water supply (2,500 gpm residential standard, reduced for sprinklered ADUs per Sec. R313). CAL FIRE or the local FPD (Alpine, Bonita-Sunnyside, Deer Springs, Julian-Cuyamaca, Lakeside, North County, Pine Valley, Rancho Santa Fe, Rural FPD of San Diego County, Valley Center, etc.) reviews the ADU permit. The 2025 wildfire season reinforced these requirements; no county-wide moratorium has been imposed, but permit backlogs lengthen post-fire when affected areas surge rebuild applications.
- FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA) — National Flood Insurance Program — The county administers FEMA NFIP floodplain regulations for unincorporated parcels. Principal SFHA extents are along the San Luis Rey River (Bonsall, Pala, Pauma), San Dieguito River (Lakeside, Ramona uplands), San Diego River (Lakeside, Santee extensions), Sweetwater River (Spring Valley extensions), Otay River (Jamul, Dulzura, Otay Mesa extensions), and Tijuana River estuary (Tijuana / Imperial Beach extensions). ADUs in an SFHA require lowest-floor elevation to or above Base Flood Elevation plus 1 ft county freeboard, flood vents on enclosures below BFE, anchoring, and a post-construction Elevation Certificate. 2024-2025 saw several FEMA FIRM revision studies for Otay, San Luis Rey, and Sweetwater watersheds; owners should confirm current effective panel before design.
- Airport Land Use Compatibility Plans (ALUCP) — San Diego Regional Airport Authority ALUC — The San Diego County Regional Airport Authority serves as the ALUC for all airports in the county. ALUCP airport influence areas (AIAs) extend roughly 2-5 miles beyond each airport depending on runway configuration and establish safety zones (Zones 1-6) and noise contours (60/65/70 dB CNEL). Principal ALUCP overlays affecting unincorporated parcels are MCAS Miramar (extensive AIA covering Scripps Ranch fringes, Miramar Ranch North, Tierrasanta approaches, into unincorporated Rancho Santa Fe / Poway fringes), Gillespie Field (AIA extending into unincorporated Lakeside, El Cajon fringes, Bostonia), McClellan-Palomar (Carlsbad-adjacent unincorporated areas), Ramona Airport (large rural AIA), and Fallbrook Community Airpark (Bonsall / Fallbrook). An ADU in a safety zone may face density restrictions, CC&R / avigation-easement recording requirements, and noise-attenuation construction standards (STC-rated windows, forced-air HVAC with acoustic treatment). The ALUC reviews county-referred projects; in a safety-zone conflict the county may override only by a super-majority Board vote per PUC 21676.
- San Diego County Biological Mitigation Ordinance / Multiple Species Conservation Program (MSCP) — The county's MSCP covers south county unincorporated areas and establishes Pre-Approved Mitigation Areas and a Biological Mitigation Ordinance that triggers biological review for grading and construction in designated preserve-land overlays. An ADU outside the existing dwelling footprint that requires grading in a designated MSCP preserve or Biological Resource Core / Linkage area will trigger a biological review / mitigation obligation on top of the ministerial ADU permit. Inside a parcel's previously-disturbed building envelope the MSCP typically does not add requirements. The East County MSCP Subarea Plan remains pending final approval as of 2026-04-20.
County permitting (unincorporated parcels)
The County of San Diego Planning & Development Services (PDS) department is the single-point-of-contact for ADU permits on parcels in the unincorporated county. Unincorporated San Diego County covers approximately 3,570 square miles (about 79% of the county's 4,526 sqmi land area) and includes densely developed fringe areas (Ramona, Alpine, Lakeside, Spring Valley, Fallbrook, Valley Center), rural back-country (Julian, Warner Springs, Jacumba, Boulevard, Campo), and tribal lands (which are not county-permitted). The 18 incorporated cities (San Diego, Chula Vista, Oceanside, Escondido, Carlsbad, Vista, San Marcos, El Cajon, Santee, La Mesa, Encinitas, National City, Poway, Coronado, Imperial Beach, Lemon Grove, Del Mar, Solana Beach) permit their own ADUs independently. PDS combines planning / zoning review, building plan review, grading / drainage review, fire-district referral (most unincorporated areas are served by CAL FIRE / County Fire Authority or a local Fire Protection District rather than a city fire department), and environmental review (CEQA applicability is normally exempt for ministerial ADUs per Gov. Code 65852.2(f) and Pub. Res. Code 21080(b)(8)).
California state — ADU law and programs
State ADU law
California has the most aggressive statewide ADU preemption regime in the US, built from ~15 bills passed 2019-2025 and enforced by the Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD). The 2026 HCD ADU Handbook addendum (in effect with the 2025 Title 24 code cycle) is the operative state-level reference. The regime does four things at once: (1) preempts local zoning that would ban or unreasonably restrict ADUs; (2) imposes by-right ministerial approval with short statutory deadlines; (3) caps fees and utility-connection charges; and (4) empowers HCD to void non-compliant local ordinances.
State HOA preemption
California has the strongest statewide HOA-preemption regime in the US for accessory dwelling units, built from two bills: AB 670 (2019) voided ADU-prohibiting covenants on single-family residential lots, and AB 3182 (2020) extended and codified the preemption into the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civil Code §§ 4740 / 4741). The combination prohibits common-interest communities from banning ADUs, restricting rentals below 25% of separate interests, or treating ADUs as separate HOA interests. Limits remain: HOAs retain authority over reasonable design standards and statutory height limits, and the 2026 Carlsbad case (CalMatters coverage) established that an HOA's documented design-standards regime can effectively delay or constrain ADU approval short of outright prohibition.
State financing programs
California's flagship state-level ADU financing program — the CalHFA ADU Grant Program — is paused and has not been refunded since the original $100 million allocation was fully deployed 2023-12-28. The program provided up to $40,000 per qualifying homeowner for pre-construction and non-recurring closing costs and financed approximately 2,500 ADUs in two rounds. As of 2026-04, no new funding round has been announced in the state budget. CalHFA continues to publish anti-scam warnings because bad actors actively solicit homeowners claiming access to grant funds that no longer exist. State-level financing activity has shifted to local pilot programs (San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, San Diego) and private financing products (Fannie Mae ADU mortgage, HELOC, construction-to-permanent).
State housing programs
California's state-level ADU programs are concentrated at HCD (technical guidance, ordinance review, enforcement) and the paused CalHFA grant pipeline (covered under stateFinancing). The state does not operate a central pre-approved ADU plan library — instead, AB 1332 (2024) created a preemption framework for local pre-approved plans with a 30-day ministerial-approval deadline, and major cities (Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, Sacramento, Berkeley) have rolled out their own plan catalogs. The California YIMBY coalition and other housing-policy organizations play an influential role in bill drafting; they are not state agencies but effectively drive much of the ADU legislative agenda. The Title 24 code cycle (now 2025, in effect for 2026 permits) is the authoritative building-code baseline.
Federal (United States) — ADU-relevant rules and programs
Federal ADU law
The United States has no federal statute that directly regulates accessory dwelling unit entitlement or design. Land-use authority over ADUs resides with states and local governments under the traditional police power. Federal engagement is limited to financing (Fannie/Freddie/FHA/VA/USDA), flood insurance (FEMA/NFIP), and discretionary housing programs (HUD), which are recorded in sibling sections of this file.
Federal financing programs
Federal housing-finance agencies and GSEs set nationwide underwriting rules that govern whether an ADU can be financed, appraised, and counted toward mortgage qualifying income. The relevant actors are Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA (HUD), VA, and USDA Rural Development.
Federal tax credits
There is no ADU-specific federal tax credit. ADUs may incidentally qualify for existing federal energy-efficiency and clean-energy tax credits when the ADU construction includes qualifying measures.
Federal housing programs
HUD administers several discretionary programs that can fund ADU-related activity at the grantee's election, but none is an ADU-specific program.
ZIP Code
- 91963
Post Office
- 25050 Highway 94, 91963