San Mateo County compresses several very different property environments into a narrow strip between San Francisco Bay and the Pacific. A condominium near a Caltrain station, an older house in Daly City, a hillside estate above Woodside, a Midcoast cottage in Moss Beach, and an agricultural parcel near Pescadero can share a county name while depending on entirely different planning offices, utility systems, hazard reviews, and recorded rights. Good research therefore begins by locating the legal parcel and then identifying the exact local system that governs it.
A search through ParcelRecordsUSA can establish the address, assessor parcel number, assessment trail, and an initial map reference. The stronger San Mateo County file then connects that APN to the vesting deed, recorded map, permit history, zoning, coastal status, service districts, hazards, and the improvements visible on the ground. This county rewards careful jurisdiction work because a familiar mailing city can conceal an unincorporated parcel, and a short drive across the Peninsula can change the permitting authority completely.
Confirm the legal jurisdiction before searching permits
San Mateo County contains 20 incorporated cities and towns, including Daly City, South San Francisco, San Bruno, Millbrae, Burlingame, San Mateo, Belmont, San Carlos, Redwood City, Menlo Park, East Palo Alto, Pacifica, and Half Moon Bay. Those municipalities generally control planning and building permits inside their boundaries. The County Planning and Building Department instead handles unincorporated places such as Broadmoor, North Fair Oaks, Emerald Lake Hills, parts of the hills west of Interstate 280, the urban Midcoast communities of Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, and Princeton, and rural Coastside areas around La Honda, Loma Mar, and Pescadero.
Do not rely on the postal address, school district, utility bill, or real estate description to decide jurisdiction. Use official parcel and boundary mapping, then record the responsible planning office, building department, fire agency, water supplier, sewer district or onsite wastewater system, road authority, and any association. A parcel near Redwood City may be in unincorporated North Fair Oaks; a property described as Half Moon Bay may lie outside the city; and a Woodside mailing address may involve the Town of Woodside, the County, or another nearby jurisdiction.
Build the title and parcel-map chain around the APN
The Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder and Elections office, commonly called ACRE, provides assessment and parcel resources, while the County Property Maps Portal helps users locate tax parcels and map references. Those tools are valuable for orientation, but an assessor map is not a boundary survey, title opinion, or guarantee of legal access. Obtain the current deed, read the full legal description, and retrieve every subdivision map, parcel map, condominium plan, record of survey, or certificate of correction that it references.
Use the grantor-grantee index to search current and prior owners, trusts, developers, associations, and document numbers. The online index identifies recorded instruments, but document images are not displayed through the public index; copies must be ordered through the Recorder. Search for deeds, deeds of trust, reconveyances, easements, covenants, notices, restrictions, road agreements, utility rights, and boundary documents. For rural or hillside land, compare the recorded description with monuments, fences, roads, creeks, retaining structures, and utility corridors, and commission a licensed survey when acreage, encroachment, or buildable area matters.
Peninsula infill requires building-level permit research
Along the Bayshore and El Camino Real corridors, the key questions are often not acreage but lawful floor area, units, parking, drainage, and shared obligations. Review permits for additions, garage conversions, accessory dwelling units, basement or attic finishes, decks, retaining walls, solar systems, electrical service, seismic work, and sewer laterals. An improvement listed in assessment records is not necessarily evidence that the work was permitted or finaled. Compare assessor characteristics with planning approvals, building permits, final inspections, and the present configuration room by room.
For condominiums, townhomes, and planned developments, obtain the declaration, amendments, condominium plan, unit and parking designations, budgets, reserve studies, insurance, minutes, violation history, rental restrictions, litigation disclosures, and special assessments. Bayfront and low-lying parcels may also require flood, drainage, sea-level, groundwater, and shoreline research. Properties near airports, rail lines, freeways, former industrial corridors, or filled Bay margins deserve separate review of noise, environmental records, vapor concerns, easements, and public improvement plans.
The Coastside adds a Local Coastal Program layer
Unincorporated coastal property is governed by the County’s Local Coastal Program as well as zoning and building rules. Development can include more than a new house: additions, grading, land division, changes in use, substantial vegetation removal, retaining work, and some accessory structures can require a Coastal Development Permit or a documented exemption. Identify whether the parcel is in the Coastal Zone, the applicable land-use designation and zoning district, any sensitive habitat or agricultural overlay, and every prior coastal approval before designing a project.
The urban Midcoast has an unusually specific capacity constraint. A County notice updated June 22, 2026 explains that the Local Coastal Program limits residential building permits in the urban Midcoast, including accessory dwelling units, to 40 housing units per calendar year and administers a waitlist. Because the count and procedures are time-sensitive, a buyer in Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, or Princeton should verify the current year’s status directly with Planning before assuming that an otherwise approvable project can receive a building permit on a preferred schedule.
Water, wastewater, and roads define many coastal lots
Two similar-looking Coastside parcels may have very different service conditions. Identify the water provider, meter or connection status, sewer district, capacity charges, and any moratorium, allocation, or extension requirement. In rural areas, obtain well construction records, yield and water-quality information, storage and treatment details, and the approved onsite wastewater file. Septic research should include the original design, bedroom capacity, final inspection, repair history, reserve area, setbacks, and whether a proposed addition would require a new evaluation.
Trace legal and physical access from a public road to the building area. Review recorded access and utility easements, road-maintenance agreements, gates, bridge or culvert capacity, drainage, turnarounds, road width and grade, and emergency-vehicle requirements. A driveway used for decades may not include the recorded width, maintenance rights, or utility rights needed for reconstruction. Narrow coastal roads, steep hillside routes, and private lanes can also affect construction staging, insurance, evacuation, and the cost of routine ownership.
Slope, fault, wildfire, and coastal erosion must be parcel-specific
San Mateo County’s hills and coast contain steep slopes, landslide terrain, mapped faults, coastal bluffs, erosion, creek corridors, wildfire exposure, and intense winter drainage. County GIS can screen for zoning, flood, coastal, sewer, fire, and water-district layers, but mapped screening is not a substitute for a parcel-specific geologic, geotechnical, drainage, or survey analysis. Review prior soils reports, grading permits, retaining-wall records, drainage easements, landslide history, and any conditions imposed on earlier approvals.
On the Coastside, determine whether the usable building area may shrink because of bluff retreat, creek setbacks, habitat, septic reserve needs, or required access. In the hills around La Honda, Skyline, and the western slopes, research wildfire hazard, vegetation, defensible space, emergency water, secondary egress, road closures, power reliability, and insurance before the contingency period expires. A generous tax parcel can still have a small practical building envelope once slope, access, wastewater, fire, and environmental requirements are combined.
The secured tax bill can contain more than the statewide one-percent base rate. Review voter-approved debt, school bonds, parcel taxes, sewer or water assessments, landscape or lighting charges, and other direct assessments. Estimate reassessment and supplemental bills from the anticipated transaction rather than the seller’s historic assessed value. Confirm whether utility connection fees, road dues, association charges, or pending capital projects will create costs that do not appear in the current tax figure.
The California property-records directory is useful when ownership or comparable research crosses county lines, but the San Mateo conclusion should remain tied to the exact city or County office, coastal status, service districts, and recorded documents. Countywide data cannot answer whether a particular addition was finaled, whether a Midcoast permit slot is available, whether a private road right is adequate, or whether a bluff or hillside building area remains feasible.
A practical San Mateo County research sequence
Start with the APN, assessor map, deed, legal description, recorded map, and official-record index. Confirm incorporated or unincorporated jurisdiction and identify the planning, building, fire, water, wastewater, road, and association authorities. Retrieve permit history and final inspections; request older or departmental records when the online file is incomplete. Then review zoning, coastal approvals, hazards, title exceptions, taxes, district charges, utilities, access, insurance, and future public projects.
Walk the parcel with the approved plans and recorded maps in hand. Reconcile every building, unit, parking space, wall, deck, road, utility, and drainage feature with the file. Use the San Mateo County property-records page as the starting point for the APN and assessment trail, then obtain written, parcel-specific answers from the responsible local agencies. In a county where a Peninsula infill lot and a remote Coastside parcel can be only miles apart, the best research explains not just who owns the land, but which local system controls what can safely and lawfully happen there.