City
Rancho Cucamonga
Rancho Cucamonga is a city record. City or town offices may handle local rules inside their limits, while county offices still handle records, taxes, courts, and many services.
Starting point
Confirm the address is inside local limits first.
If the address is inside Rancho Cucamonga, city or town offices may handle local permits, code, and services. If it is outside limits, county routing may be the better first stop.
A mailing city is not always the same as city government jurisdiction.
2025 population
177,856
Land area
46.522 sq mi
Water area
0.01 sq mi
Directory notes
Local layers to keep on the same page.
Confirm city or town limits.
A mailing address can use a nearby place name. If the address is outside limits, county offices may handle permits, code, and land-use routes.
County still matters.
San Bernardino County can still matter for assessor, tax collector, recorder, court, public health, social service, and election records.
Some layers are separate.
Water, sewer, fire, school, utilities, coast, earthquake maps, wildfire zones, parks, and trails may point outside city hall.
County layer
County shown for Rancho Cucamonga
Practical notes
Office, map, permit, and paperwork notes for Rancho Cucamonga
Place note · Cars and driving · Reviewed July 7, 2026
Cucamonga Station is becoming a bigger travel hinge
Cucamonga Station connects Rancho Cucamonga to Metrolink service, Omnitrans, and the ONT Connect shuttle to Ontario International Airport.
Place note · Home and property · Reviewed July 6, 2026
Rancho Cucamonga uses Burrtec for trash, recycling, and organics
Rancho Cucamonga has Burrtec as its single franchised waste hauler, with city guidance for carts, food waste, green waste, bulky pickup, and special disposal items.
Place note · Rules and licenses · Reviewed July 4, 2026
Rancho Cucamonga uses RC2GO for many report-a-problem requests
Rancho Cucamonga's Report an Issue page routes local service requests through RC2GO, with separate city pages for permits, records, and public safety.
Place note · Home and property · Reviewed July 4, 2026
Rancho Cucamonga's ReadyRC page fits the foothill setting
Rancho Cucamonga's ReadyRC program covers local preparation for fire, flood, windstorm, earthquake, alerts, CERT, and emergency training, which is useful in a foothill city.
Place note · Rules and licenses · Reviewed July 3, 2026
Rancho Cucamonga building permits are handled online
Rancho Cucamonga routes building permit applications through its Online Permit Center, with separate contacts for quick permit types and other technical questions.
Place note · Rules and licenses · Reviewed July 3, 2026
Rancho Cucamonga business licenses depend on where the business sits
Rancho Cucamonga business license applications can branch between home occupation, commercial or industrial location, short-term rental, street vendor, and special permit paths.
Almanac notes
Stories and local context near Rancho Cucamonga
Place note · History and culture
Chaffey-Garcia House keeps Rancho Cucamonga close to its citrus roots
Rancho Cucamonga's Chaffey-Garcia House gives Etiwanda a preserved home-and-citrus layer beside the city's newer foothill and Route 66 stories.
Place note · Outdoors
Pacific Electric Trail turns Rancho Cucamonga rail into a path
Rancho Cucamonga's Pacific Electric Trail follows an old railway corridor, giving walkers, runners, cyclists, and riders a public path with transportation history underneath.
Place note · History and culture
Rancho Cucamonga still has old vines hiding in Central Park
Central Park's historic grapevines connect Rancho Cucamonga to Cucamonga Valley winegrowing, old dry-farmed vines, Route 66, and an early commercial winery landmark.
Place note · History and culture
Rancho Cucamonga keeps a Route 66 gas station story alive
The Cucamonga Service Station began as a 1915 roadside stop and now helps Rancho Cucamonga show its place on old Route 66.
County layer · History and culture
Fontana Days Run is a community thread with long legs
The Fontana Days Run began as a local half marathon in 1955 and now helps carry one of the city's best-known civic traditions.
County layer · History and culture
The California Theatre keeps San Bernardino's movie-palace layer
San Bernardino's California Theatre is a 1928 downtown landmark, with movie-palace roots, live performances, and a long civic role.
County layer · History and culture
Chino's Old Schoolhouse Museum keeps the first classroom close
Chino's Old Schoolhouse Museum began as the city's first schoolhouse in 1888, then became a social hall, historical society museum, and city-owned history stop.
County layer · History and culture
Foothill Boulevard keeps Rialto's Route 66 and rail layer visible
Rialto's older story runs through ranching, the Santa Fe Railroad, Foothill Boulevard, Route 66, Pacific Electric rail, and downtown pieces that still help explain the Inland Empire city.