City
Anderson
Anderson 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 Anderson, 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
11,131
Land area
7.031 sq mi
Water area
0.18 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.
Shasta 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 Anderson
Practical notes
Office, map, permit, and paperwork notes for Anderson
County layer · Rules and licenses · Reviewed July 4, 2026
Redding business starts with the license and the location
Redding business owners may need a city business license, a home occupation affidavit, county or state permits, and a separate permit-center path for building work.
County layer · Rules and licenses · Reviewed July 4, 2026
Redding project permits start at the Permit Center
Redding's Permit Center handles building and development questions, online permit checks, inspection requests, forms, parcel information, fee requests, and local agency contacts.
County layer · Home and property · Reviewed July 3, 2026
Redding utilities are mostly under one city roof
Redding is unusual because city public utilities cover electric, water, wastewater, storm drain, and solid waste service, with start, stop, and transfer links on the utility pages.
County layer · Outdoors · Reviewed July 1, 2026
Burney Falls is loud, cold, and fed from hidden springs
Burney Falls drops 129 feet, but the surprising part is the spring water pouring from the basalt cliff around the main falls.
County layer · History and culture · Reviewed July 1, 2026
Old Shasta's brick ruins show where the northern road once mattered
Shasta State Historic Park preserves brick ruins, streets, cemeteries, and courthouse history from a Gold Rush town that once anchored northern California travel and trade.
Almanac notes
Stories and local context near Anderson
Place note · History and culture
Anderson River Park gives the city its Sacramento River backyard
Anderson's 440-acre River Park ties the Shasta County city to the Sacramento River with trails, shade, fishing, sports, and summer events.
County layer · History and culture
Redding has a bridge that really works like a sundial
The Sundial Bridge crosses the Sacramento River in Redding and uses its tall design to cast a moving time shadow.
County layer · History and culture
Shasta Dam puts California water in one big view
Shasta Dam, built on the Sacramento River between 1938 and 1945, is a major Central Valley Project site for water storage, power, and recreation.
County layer · Outdoors
Whiskeytown gives Shasta County a clear lake and mountain park
Whiskeytown National Recreation Area sits west of Redding with a clear lake, waterfalls, mountain trails, Gold Rush history, and forested hills.