Never just stop paying rent without legal guidance. Rent withholding must be done correctly or your landlord can evict you for nonpayment. Always put money in a separate account and consult an attorney.
Overview
California law imposes a strict duty on landlords to keep rental units in habitable condition. This is called the "implied warranty of habitability." If your landlord fails to maintain safe, livable conditions and ignores repair requests, you have powerful legal remedies โ including rent withholding, repair-and-deduct, and damages.
๐ Common Habitability Violations
โ Key California Laws
Requires landlords to keep rental units in habitable condition at all times. This duty cannot be waived by lease terms.
Defines specific habitability standards: effective waterproofing, plumbing, heating, electrical, clean premises, working fixtures, adequate ventilation.
Authorizes tenants to use repair-and-deduct remedy (up to one month's rent, twice per year) if landlord fails to repair within a reasonable time.
Lists substandard conditions including mold, vermin infestation, lack of heat, broken windows/doors, and structural hazards.
Prohibits landlords from demanding rent on units with unaddressed code violations that affect health/safety.
What To Do โ Step by Step
Take dated photos and videos. Note the date you first noticed the problem and any impact on your health or use of the unit.
Put your repair request in writing โ email or certified mail. Keep a copy. Oral requests don't create a legal record. Give your landlord a reasonable time to respond (typically 30 days, less for urgent issues).
Contact your local housing or building department to request an official inspection. An inspector's citation creates a powerful paper trail and triggers legal protections against retaliation.
If landlord fails to repair within a reasonable time, you may hire a licensed contractor and deduct the cost from rent (up to one month's rent, twice per year). Provide your landlord advance notice and itemized receipts.
For severe habitability failures, you may withhold rent โ but put it in a trust account and consult an attorney first. Improper withholding can result in eviction.
You can sue for: rent reduction during uninhabitable period, medical costs, property damage, emotional distress, and punitive damages for willful neglect.