TinyHomeNavigator

San Bernardino County Natural Gas Guide

Research natural gas, provider boundaries, connection questions, map resources, permit questions, and documents before planning an ADU, tiny home, manufactured home, garage conversion, vacant land home, or SB9 project.

Local overview

San Bernardino County utility feasibility can vary sharply between incorporated cities, unincorporated communities, rural roads, special districts, and parcels using septic, wells, propane, or long electric extensions.

Provider may vary by parcel. Confirm directly with the utility provider or local department.

Provider or agency starting points

gas

Provider varies by parcel

Provider varies by parcel. Confirm with the city, county, utility department, service district, or provider.

Use the APN or address and request direct confirmation before relying on service assumptions.

Verification status: needs direct parcel verification

How to verify natural gas for a parcel

  • Identify the APN and address.
  • Confirm city versus unincorporated county jurisdiction.
  • Identify the provider or agency that controls this utility.
  • Check service boundary, GIS, permit, or provider resources where available.
  • Ask whether connection, capacity, fees, easements, trenching, or extensions apply.
  • Request written confirmation where possible.

Questions to ask

  • Who provides gas service?
  • Is there an existing meter?
  • Is a gas line extension needed?
  • Would all-electric design avoid gas work?
  • Is this parcel inside a city, service district, or unincorporated county area?
  • Is public sewer or water service nearby and recognized by the provider?
  • If sewer is unavailable, what septic review is required?
  • If public water is unavailable, what well records or permits are needed?
  • What utility easements or line extensions may be required?

Common local red flags

  • No gas main nearby
  • Line extension required
  • Meter capacity unknown
  • Electrification rules or design choice affects scope
  • Unincorporated or rural parcel
  • No public sewer nearby
  • Well-only or hauled-water assumptions
  • Long electric line extension
  • Private road or utility easement needed
  • Fire-flow or driveway access issue

Documents to collect

  • APN
  • Parcel map
  • Utility bills if an existing structure is present
  • Sewer connection records
  • Septic records
  • Well records
  • Water provider confirmation
  • Electric meter or panel information
  • Gas meter information
  • Utility easements
  • Prior permit records
  • GIS map screenshots or links

Related local guides

Related guides

TinyHomeNavigator provides educational information only. Rules vary by parcel, zoning district, city, county, overlay, utility provider, fire authority, and environmental health department. Always confirm directly with the local planning department, building department, environmental health department, fire authority, and utility providers before buying land, designing, permitting, placing, or building any structure.