Will repaving my lot trigger stormwater rules?

Asphalt paver laying a new residential driveway
22MAR
2026

Will repaving my lot trigger stormwater rules?

It can. Once a job paves or repaves 5,000 square feet or more, it has to treat its own stormwater on site. The part most owners miss is that repaving counts, so tearing out and replacing an old lot can trigger it.

Regulators care about how much hard surface sheds water and where that water goes. Larger projects may need to manage runoff on site with the right grading and drainage features.

“Repaving counts, so tearing out and replacing an old lot can trigger stormwater rules on its own.”

North Bay Grading and PavingSonoma County

What triggers the rule

Under the Bay Area stormwater permit, a project that creates or replaces 5,000 square feet or more of paved surface has to treat its own stormwater. The detail that catches owners off guard is that replaced surface counts the same as new, so a straight tear-out and repave can cross the line with no added pavement.

Plate compactor packing base before the asphalt is laid
Graded and compacted road base ready for paving

What it means for your budget

A triggered project needs treatment like a bioretention area or permeable paving, often sized around 4 percent of the paved area. That takes space and budget, so it pays to know early. We flag it before you commit, design the grading and drainage to meet it, and confirm what applies to your watershed.

  • Trigger at 5,000 square feet
  • Repaving counts too
  • We flag it early
Paver and roller finishing an asphalt job at dusk

The key is to know before you bid. We will flag likely stormwater considerations during your estimate so there are no surprises mid-project.

Blog Author

North Bay Grading and Paving

Serving all of Sonoma County

North Bay Grading and Paving provides grading, asphalt paving, sealcoating and repair throughout Sonoma County. Have a question? Call (707) 396-3740 for a free estimate.