<p>Dairies emit roughly half of total methane (CH<sub>4</sub>) emissions in California, generating CH<sub>4</sub> from both enteric fermentation by ruminant gut microbes and anaerobic decomposition of manure. Representation of these emission processes is essential for management and mitigation of CH<sub>4</sub> emissions, and is typically done using standardized emission factors applied at large spatial scales (e.g., state level). However, CH4-emitting activities and management decisions vary across facilities, and current inventories do not have sufficiently high spatial resolution to capture changes at this scale. Here, we develop a spatially-explicit database of dairies in California, with information from operating permits and California-specific reports detailing herd demographics and manure management at the facility scale. We calculated manure management and enteric fermentation CH<sub>4</sub> emissions using two previously published bottom-up approaches and a new farm-specific calculation developed in this work. We also estimate the effect of mitigation strategies – the use of mechanical separators and installation of anaerobic digesters – on CH<sub>4</sub> emissions. We predict that implementation of digesters at the 109 dairies that are existing or planned in California will reduce manure CH<sub>4</sub> emissions from those facilities by an average of 35 %, and total state CH<sub>4</sub> emissions by 6 % (or ~ 47.3 Gg CH<sub>4</sub>/yr). In addition to serving as a planning tool for mitigation, this database is useful as a prior for atmospheric observation-based emissions estimates, attribution of emissions to a specific facility, and to validate CH<sub>4</sub> emissions reductions from management changes. Raster files of the datasets and associated metadata are available from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distributed Active Archive Center for Biogeochemical Dynamics (ORNL DAAC; Marklein et al., 2020; <a href=" https://doi.org/10.3334/ORNLDAAC/1814"target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.3334/ORNLDAAC/1814</a>).</p>