EZ Building Climate Zone Finder 2.0

The Energy Commission has developed this app to quickly and accurately show addresses and locations to determine California’s climate regions. We invite builders and building officials to use this app to determine the climate zones applicable to building projects.Please note:Building Climates Zones of California Climate Zone Descriptions for New Buildings - California is divided into 16 climatic boundaries or climate zones, which is incorporated into the Energy Efficiency Standards (Energy Code). Each Climate zone has a unique climatic condition that dictates which minimum efficiency requirements are needed for that specific climate zone. The California climate zones shown in this map are not the same as what we commonly call climate areas such as "desert" or "alpine" climates. The climate zones are based on energy use, temperature, weather and other factors.This is explained in the Title 24 energy efficiency standards glossary section:"The Energy Commission established 16 climate zones that represent a geographic area for which an energy budget is established. These energy budgets are the basis for the standards...." "(An) energy budget is the maximum amount of energy that a building, or portion of a building...can be designed to consume per year.""The Energy Commission originally developed weather data for each climate zone by using unmodified (but error-screened) data for a representative city and weather year (representative months from various years). The Energy Commission analyzed weather data from weather stations selected for (1) reliability of data, (2) currency of data, (3) proximity to population centers, and (4) non-duplication of stations within a climate zone."Using this information, they created representative temperature data for each zone. The remainder of the weather data for each zone is still that of the representative city." The representative city for each climate zone (CZ) is:CZ 1: ArcataCZ 2: Santa RosaCZ 3: OaklandCZ 4: San Jose-ReidCZ 5: Santa MariaCZ 6: TorranceCZ 7: San Diego-LindberghCZ 8: FullertonCZ 9: Burbank-GlendaleCZ10: RiversideCZ11: Red BluffCZ12: SacramentoCZ13: FresnoCZ14: PalmdaleCZ15: Palm Spring-IntlCZ16: Blue CanyonThe original detailed survey definitions of the 16 Climate Zones are found in the 1995 publication, "California Climate Zone Descriptions for New Buildings." 

Data and Resources

Field Value
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identifier 4b9eebdc-9152-47ef-bfe2-4619682cb37a
issued 2022-01-25T17:51:04.000Z
modified 2022-01-25T19:26:37.000Z
publisher California Energy Commission
resource-type Dataset
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Groups
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  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
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  • amerigeoss
  • building-climate-zone
  • california-energy-commission
  • california-natural-resources-agency
  • caopendata
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  • national
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isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer tdavid_CAEnergy
maintainer_email gis@energy.ca.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T02:00:23.220264
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T02:00:23.220268
notes <span style='font-family:&quot;Avenir Next W01&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next W00&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next&quot;, Avenir, &quot;Helvetica Neue&quot;, sans-serif; font-size:16px;'>The Energy Commission has developed this app to quickly and accurately show addresses and locations to determine California’s climate regions. We invite builders and building officials to use this app to determine the climate zones applicable to building projects.</span><div style='font-family:&quot;Avenir Next W01&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next W00&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next&quot;, Avenir, &quot;Helvetica Neue&quot;, sans-serif; font-size:16px;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:&quot;Avenir Next W01&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next W00&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next&quot;, Avenir, &quot;Helvetica Neue&quot;, sans-serif; font-size:16px;'>Please note:</div><div style='font-family:&quot;Avenir Next W01&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next W00&quot;, &quot;Avenir Next&quot;, Avenir, &quot;Helvetica Neue&quot;, sans-serif; font-size:16px;'><div style='font-family:inherit;'>Building Climates Zones of California Climate Zone Descriptions for New Buildings - California is divided into 16 climatic boundaries or climate zones, which is incorporated into the Energy Efficiency Standards (Energy Code). Each Climate zone has a unique climatic condition that dictates which minimum efficiency requirements are needed for that specific climate zone. The California climate zones shown in this map are not the same as what we commonly call climate areas such as &quot;desert&quot; or &quot;alpine&quot; climates. The climate zones are based on energy use, temperature, weather and other factors.</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>This is explained in the Title 24 energy efficiency standards glossary section:</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>&quot;The Energy Commission established 16 climate zones that represent a geographic area for which an energy budget is established. These energy budgets are the basis for the standards....&quot; &quot;(An) energy budget is the maximum amount of energy that a building, or portion of a building...can be designed to consume per year.&quot;</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>&quot;The Energy Commission originally developed weather data for each climate zone by using unmodified (but error-screened) data for a representative city and weather year (representative months from various years). The Energy Commission analyzed weather data from weather stations selected for (1) reliability of data, (2) currency of data, (3) proximity to population centers, and (4) non-duplication of stations within a climate zone.</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>&quot;Using this information, they created representative temperature data for each zone. The remainder of the weather data for each zone is still that of the representative city.&quot; The representative city for each climate zone (CZ) is:</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'><br /></div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 1: Arcata</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 2: Santa Rosa</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 3: Oakland</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 4: San Jose-Reid</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 5: Santa Maria</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 6: Torrance</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 7: San Diego-Lindbergh</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 8: Fullerton</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ 9: Burbank-Glendale</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ10: Riverside</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ11: Red Bluff</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ12: Sacramento</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ13: Fresno</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ14: Palmdale</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ15: Palm Spring-Intl</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>CZ16: Blue Canyon</div><div style='font-family:inherit;'>The original detailed survey definitions of the 16 Climate Zones are found in the 1995 publication, &quot;California Climate Zone Descriptions for New Buildings.&quot; </div></div>
num_resources 2
num_tags 13
title EZ Building Climate Zone Finder 2.0