Home โ†’ Issues โ†’ Rent Control & AB 1482

Rent Control & AB 1482

Know your cap โ€” statewide and local protections explained.

โš– California Law โœ“ Updated 2026 ๐Ÿ“ All 58 Counties
โš 
Important

Paying an illegal rent increase without objection may be treated as acceptance. Always dispute in writing and keep a copy.

Overview

California has a patchwork of rent control laws โ€” the statewide AB 1482 cap applies broadly, but dozens of cities have their own stronger local ordinances. Whether your rent can be raised, by how much, and how often depends on your city, your building's age, and your unit type. Understanding which rules apply to you is step one.

๐Ÿ™ Rent Control by Major City

City Annual Rent Cap Notes
Los Angeles 3โ€“8% (RSO units) RSO covers pre-1978 multi-unit buildings. AB 1482 covers newer units.
San Francisco 60% of CPI One of the strongest RSOs. Covers most pre-1979 units.
Oakland CPI (โ‰ˆ3โ€“5%) Covers most pre-1983 units. Just cause protections are strong.
San Jose 5% or CPI Covers pre-1979 units with 3+ units. Active Rent Board.
Santa Monica CPI (โ‰ˆ2โ€“3%) Very strong RSO. Covers most pre-1979 rentals.
Berkeley CPI Strong RSO with active Rent Board. Covers most pre-1980 units.
West Hollywood 75% of CPI Covers most rental units. Strong tenant protections.
Inglewood 5% or CPI RSO enacted 2020. Covers pre-1995 multi-unit buildings.

๐Ÿšซ Common Exemptions from Rent Control

โœ—Single-family homes where owner provided written Costa-Hawkins notice
โœ—Condominiums where owner provided proper notice
โœ—Units built within the last 15 years (rolling AB 1482 exemption)
โœ—Owner-occupied buildings with 2 or fewer units (duplexes)
โœ—Government-subsidized housing with own rent rules
โœ—Dormitories and student housing
โœ—Hotels and motels (non-residential tenancy)

โš– Key California Laws

AB 1482 โ€” Tenant Protection Act (2020)

Caps annual rent increases at 5% + local CPI (max 10%) for covered units. Requires just cause for eviction after 12 months of tenancy.

Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act (1995)

Limits local rent control by exempting single-family homes, condos, and units built after 1995 (or the local ordinance date). Allows vacancy decontrol.

Local RSOs

Cities including LA, SF, Oakland, San Jose, Santa Monica, Berkeley, and others have their own rent stabilization ordinances that often provide stronger protections than AB 1482.

What To Do โ€” Step by Step

1
Determine if you're covered

Check your city's rent board website. Look up your building's year of construction. Confirm your landlord's ownership type (single-family, condo, etc.). Many cities have online lookup tools.

2
Know your allowable increase

For AB 1482: 5% + local CPI, maximum 10%. For local RSOs: check your city's rent board for the current year's allowable percentage. Increases can only happen once every 12 months.

3
Verify proper notice

Rent increases require written notice: 30 days for increases under 10%, 90 days for increases of 10% or more. Oral notice is not sufficient.

4
Challenge illegal increases

Send a written dispute citing the applicable law. Contact your local rent board. File a complaint with the city. Do not simply pay an illegal increase โ€” it can be treated as acceptance.

5
Consult a tenant attorney

Illegal rent increases can result in rent rollback orders, repayment of overcharged amounts, and penalties. An attorney can file on your behalf.

In-Depth Articles

It depends on your unit. Under AB 1482 (the Tenant Protection Act), most California landlords can only raise rent once per year, by a maximum of 5% plus local CPI โ€” and never more than 10% total. A 20% increase almost certainly violates this cap for covered units. AB 1482 applies to most multi-family buildings older than 15 years, but does NOT cover single-family homes or condos where the owner has given proper written notice, or buildings built in the last 15 years. Check your unit at tenantprotections.org. If you are covered, send a written dispute to your landlord immediately โ€” paying the increase without objecting can be treated as acceptance. Many cities (LA, SF, Oakland, Santa Monica) have even stricter local rent caps.
No โ€” a 3-day notice is NOT a court order and you do not have to leave. It is the first step in a legal process. If you pay the full amount owed within the 3-day period, the eviction stops entirely. If you do not pay, your landlord must then file an Unlawful Detainer (UD) lawsuit in court. After you are served with the court summons, you now have 10 business days to file a written response (AB 2347 extended this from 5 days starting January 1, 2025). Only a judge can order you to leave โ€” not your landlord. Do not ignore the summons or you will get a default judgment automatically.
Under California Civil Code ยง1950.5, landlords can only deduct for cleaning that brings the unit back to the condition it was in when you moved in โ€” not to make it cleaner. They cannot charge for professional cleaning if you left it reasonably clean. Under AB 2801 (effective 2025), landlords must now take photos before and after any cleaning or repairs, and must provide itemized receipts for work over $125. If they failed to follow these requirements, they forfeit their right to deductions entirely. Send a written demand letter disputing the specific deductions. If unresolved, file in small claims court โ€” you can recover the deposit plus up to 2x the amount as a bad faith penalty, plus court costs.
No. California Civil Code ยง1954 requires landlords to give at least 24 hours written notice before entering for non-emergency purposes, and entry must be during normal business hours (8amโ€“6pm, or agreed hours). Verbal notice is not sufficient โ€” it must be in writing (a text message counts). The only exception is a genuine emergency (fire, flood, gas leak). Repeated unauthorized entries constitute landlord harassment under Civil Code ยง1940.2. Send your landlord a written letter citing ยง1954 and demanding they stop. If it continues, document every incident with dates and times, and consult a tenant attorney โ€” you may be entitled to damages.
You have options, but stopping rent cold is risky without legal guidance. Visible mold that poses a health risk is a substandard condition under California Health & Safety Code ยง17920.3 and your landlord must remediate it. Your safest options are: (1) File a code enforcement complaint with your city or county โ€” this triggers a formal inspection and puts your landlord on legal notice; (2) Repair and deduct โ€” hire a licensed contractor and deduct costs from rent (up to one month's rent, twice per year); (3) Rent withholding into a separate trust account for severe conditions โ€” but consult an attorney first; (4) Sue for damages including rent reduction during the uninhabitable period. Always document with dated photos and send repair requests by certified mail.
Only under very specific conditions. Under AB 1482, "substantial remodel" is a valid no-fault just cause, BUT the landlord must: (1) give you 60 days written notice (if you have lived there 1+ year); (2) pay you relocation assistance equal to one month's rent; (3) the renovation must require permits and be so substantial that you cannot safely occupy the unit during work. Cosmetic upgrades do not qualify. After the work is complete, you typically have the right to return at your original rent. "Ellis Act" evictions (taking the building off the rental market entirely) have even stricter rules. If your landlord claims renovation but the work is minor, this may be a pretextual eviction โ€” contact a tenant attorney immediately.
Lack of heat is a serious habitability violation โ€” California law requires landlords to maintain heating that can reach at least 70ยฐF in living areas. Before withholding rent, take these steps in order: (1) Send a written repair request by text or email AND certified mail; (2) Give your landlord a "reasonable time" to fix it โ€” for heating in cold weather, 24-72 hours is reasonable; (3) File a code enforcement complaint if they don't respond; (4) Use the repair-and-deduct remedy โ€” buy space heaters or hire a contractor, deduct from rent (up to one month's rent). Outright rent withholding should be done carefully, with money held in a separate account, and ideally with an attorney's guidance. Never withhold silently โ€” always notify your landlord in writing.
No. Landlords cannot unilaterally add new fees during an existing lease period without your written consent. Any fee not specified in your signed lease agreement is unenforceable. Common illegal fees include: convenience fees for online payment, administrative fees, move-in/move-out fees beyond the security deposit limit, and excessive late fees (California generally limits late fees to 5-6% of rent). Respond in writing stating that you do not accept the new fee and that it is not part of your lease agreement. If your landlord threatens eviction over the fee, do not pay it without legal advice โ€” an eviction based on a disputed illegal fee is itself potentially illegal.
If you have lived in the unit for less than one year, your landlord must give 30 days written notice. If you have lived there for one year or more, they must give 60 days written notice. However โ€” if your unit is covered by AB 1482 (most multi-family buildings over 15 years old), your landlord also needs a valid "just cause" to end your tenancy after 12 months of residency. You cannot be evicted without cause just because you are month-to-month in a covered unit. Many cities (LA, SF, Oakland, Berkeley, Santa Monica) have even stronger protections. Check your local ordinance.
No โ€” it has been illegal in California since 2020. SB 329 expanded the state's Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) to prohibit landlords from refusing to rent based on "source of income," which explicitly includes Section 8 / Housing Choice Vouchers, VASH vouchers, and other government rental assistance. Advertising "No Section 8" is also illegal. If a landlord refuses your voucher, you can: (1) File a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD) at calcivilrights.ca.gov โ€” free, within 2 years; (2) File a complaint with HUD; (3) Sue civilly for damages, injunctive relief, and attorney fees. You can also file with your local fair housing agency.
Owner move-in (OMI) evictions are a valid no-fault just cause under AB 1482, but they come with strict requirements. The landlord or a qualifying family member must actually intend to live there as their primary residence, must move in within 90 days of your departure, and must live there for at least 12 consecutive months. You must receive 60 days written notice (if 1+ year tenancy) and relocation assistance of one month's rent. If the landlord does NOT move in, or moves out within 12 months, you may have a right to return at your original rent AND damages. OMI fraud โ€” evicting a tenant pretextually โ€” is illegal and increasingly prosecuted, especially in cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles.
As of January 1, 2025 (AB 2347), you now have 10 business days from the date you were served the Unlawful Detainer summons to file a written response with the court โ€” extended from the previous 5-day deadline. This is one of the most critical deadlines in California tenant law. Missing it means automatic judgment against you and the sheriff can remove you without a trial. You do not need a lawyer to file a response, but getting one dramatically improves your outcome. File your response (Form UD-105) at the courthouse that issued the summons. Many courthouses have self-help centers, and many counties have free legal aid for eviction defense.
This is illegal landlord harassment and potentially extortion. Under California Civil Code ยง1940.35, it is unlawful for a landlord to threaten to report a tenant's immigration status to coerce them into vacating, paying money, or waiving any legal rights. Violators face actual damages, punitive damages, a civil penalty of up to $2,000 per violation, and attorney fees. Your immigration status does NOT affect your California tenant rights โ€” you have full protections regardless of documentation status. Document the threat (text, email, or write down what was said with the date). Then contact a tenant attorney or legal aid organization immediately. This is a strong case.
California has a strong "duty to mitigate" rule โ€” your landlord is legally required to make reasonable efforts to re-rent the unit after you leave. If they find a new tenant immediately, you owe nothing for the remaining term. You only owe rent for the period the unit is actually vacant while the landlord is actively trying to re-rent it. You do NOT automatically owe 4 months of rent. To protect yourself: give written notice as early as possible, offer to cooperate with showings, keep records of your departure date and the unit's condition, and follow up to confirm re-rental. Breaking a lease for specific reasons (domestic violence, uninhabitable conditions, active military duty) carries additional legal protections under California law.
Your landlord is in violation of California law. Under Civil Code ยง1950.5, landlords must return your security deposit โ€” along with a written itemized statement of any deductions and copies of receipts โ€” within 21 calendar days of you vacating. Missing this deadline means they forfeit their right to make ANY deductions and owe you the full deposit back. Under AB 2801 (2025), they must also provide photos of any claimed damage. Send a written demand letter immediately via certified mail stating the deadline has passed, demanding full return, and citing Civil Code ยง1950.5. If they still do not respond, file in small claims court โ€” the limit is $12,500 and you can claim the full deposit plus up to 2x the withheld amount as a bad faith penalty.