City
Mount Shasta
Mount Shasta 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 Mount Shasta, 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
3,071
Land area
3.77 sq mi
Water area
0.004 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.
Siskiyou 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 Mount Shasta
Practical notes
Office, map, permit, and paperwork notes for Mount Shasta
No practical note has been attached here yet. Search the place name, use the office router, or start with statewide tools.
Almanac notes
Stories and local context near Mount Shasta
Place note · History and culture
Mount Shasta carries the Sisson story below the mountain
Mount Shasta's town story runs through Strawberry Valley, Justin Sisson, a historic fish hatchery, the Sisson Museum, and a mountain that drew John Muir.
County layer · History and culture
Dorris greets Highway 97 with railroad roots and a tall flag
Dorris grew where the Southern Pacific Railroad crossed Butte Valley, then became known to travelers for its Highway 97 setting and 200-foot flagpole.
County layer · History and culture
Dunsmuir is a railroad town with waterfalls close to the tracks
Dunsmuir sits on the Upper Sacramento River near Mount Shasta, with railroad history, an Amtrak stop, botanical gardens, and a careful plan for Mossbrae Falls access.
County layer · History and culture
Etna grew from mills, creek trouble, and a small Main Street
Etna's story starts with Rough and Ready, Aetna Mills, Etna Creek, and a small Scott Valley town center that still keeps local history close.
County layer · History and culture
Fort Jones keeps a Scott Valley army post in memory
Fort Jones takes its name from an 1850s military post near town, and the local museum helps connect that short-lived fort to Scott Valley life.
County layer · History and culture
Montague has a rail-town story under Mount Shasta
Montague began as a Shasta Valley rail hub, kept a redwood depot memory, and now adds color with its hot air balloon fair.
County layer · Outdoors
Castle Crags gives Siskiyou County a granite-and-river stop
Castle Crags State Park gives Siskiyou County a clear I-5 landmark, with granite spires, Sacramento River access, forest, campsites, and Mount Shasta views.
County layer · History and culture
Lava Beds tells a Tulelake-area story written into rough ground
Lava Beds National Monument near Tulelake combines lava tube caves, high desert, Modoc homeland, and Captain Jack's Stronghold, where the land itself shaped history.