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Parking Permits

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Permit Rules

  • Parking permits are valid only for the period of time specified.
  • Parking permits are valid only for the parking spaces intended.
  • Parking permits may not be transferred from one person to another – they are valid for use only by the person who purchased them.
  • Each parked vehicle must have its own properly displayed permit.
  • Permits must be clearly visible at all times.
  • A permit that is on the seat, floor, covered by debris, face down, or otherwise not clearly visible is considered improperly displayed.
  • Vehicles with improperly displayed permits will be issued a citation.
  • If you bought a semester parking permit and do not have it with you to display but would like to park on campus, then you must purchase a daily parking permit, or you will be issued a citation.

Permit Types

Daily Parking Permits

Daily Parking Permits

Each campus has daily parking permit machines located inside the entrances to its parking lots. Daily parking permits cost $2.

Daily Parking Permits

Semester Parking Permits for Automobiles

Semester Parking Permits for Automobiles

Semester parking permits for automobiles are valid at all of our colleges and centers.

Semester Parking Permits for Automobiles

Motorcycle Parking Permits

Motorcycle Parking Permits

Motorcycle parking permits are valid at all of our colleges and centers, so you only need to buy one per semester.

Motorcycle Parking

Disabled Parking Permits

Disabled Parking Permits

Students who need to park in a disabled parking space must display a valid daily or semester permit in addition to a disabled parking placard issued by the DMV.

Disabled Parking Permits

Employee Parking Permits

Employee Parking Permits

Employees can get two free parking permits. Additional permits costs $5 each. Employee parking permits are valid at all Los Rios locations.

Employee Parking

Disclaimer

The issuance of a parking permit does not guarantee parking availability. The responsibility of finding legal parking spaces rests with the motor vehicle operator. Lack of parking spaces is not considered a valid reason for violation of district parking regulations or California Vehicle Code provisions. It is your responsibility to read the posted signs and park accordingly.