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California State Law

Below is California state landlord tenant code for CA. This is the ultimate source of truth for landlord tenant issues in the great state of California. This is a large file but every other one we found online was jumbled up into numerous pages and hard to decipher. This should be easier to read and extract.

California Landlord-Tenant Law

Complete verbatim statute text · 71 sections

📑 Table of Contents
General
§ 1940 Scope — Who Is Covered § 1940.05 Definition — Immigration or Citizenship Status § 1940.1 Residential Hotels — Prohibition on Forced Move-Out to Maintain Transient Status § 1940.2 Landlord Harassment to Force Vacancy — Unlawful § 1940.3 Immigration Status — No Inquiry or Disclosure by Landlord § 1940.35 Reporting Immigration Status to Authorities — Unlawful § 1940.4 Political Signs — Tenant's Right to Display § 1940.41 Personal Micromobility Devices — Storage Rights § 1940.45 Religious Items on Entry Doors — Right to Display § 1940.5 Waterbeds — Landlord Cannot Refuse § 1940.6 Demolition Permit — Required Disclosure to Tenants § 1940.7 Former Military Ordnance Location — Disclosure § 1940.8 Pest Control Contract — Notice to New Tenants § 1940.8.5 Pesticide Notice Requirements — Landlord or Agent Application § 1940.9 Shared Utility Meters — Disclosure and Agreement Required § 1940.10 Personal Agriculture — Portable Containers Permitted § 1940.20 Clotheslines and Drying Racks — Permitted in Private Area § 1941 Landlord's Duty to Put Premises in Habitable Condition § 1941.1 Standards of Habitability — Untenantable Conditions § 1941.2 Tenant's Obligations — Forfeiture of Repair Rights § 1941.3 Deadbolt Locks and Window Security Devices Required § 1941.4 Telephone Jack and Inside Wiring — Landlord's Duty § 1941.5 Lock Changes for Victims of Abuse or Violence § 1941.6 Lock Changes — Restrained Co-Tenant § 1941.7 Mold — Duty to Repair Arises Upon Notice § 1941.8 Disaster Remediation — Landlord's Duty § 1941.9 Advance Rent Return — Destruction or Evacuation § 1942 Tenant's Repair-and-Deduct Remedy § 1942.1 Waiver of Habitability Rights — Void (with Exception) § 1942.2 Utility Payment by Tenant — Deductible from Rent § 1942.3 Substandard Conditions — Rebuttable Presumption of Uninhabitability in Unlawful Detainer § 1942.4 Landlord May Not Demand Rent for Substandard Unit § 1942.5 Retaliation by Landlord — Prohibited § 1942.6 Entry onto Rental Property to Provide Tenant Rights Information — Not Trespass § 1942.7 Declawing or Devocalizing Animals as Rental Condition — Prohibited § 1942.8 Bulk Internet Service — Tenant Opt-Out Right § 1943 Presumed Month-to-Month Tenancy (Non-Residential) § 1944 Lodgings — Length of Hiring Presumed from Rent Period § 1945 Holdover — Renewal on Same Terms § 1945.5 Automatic Renewal Clauses — Must Be in Bold 8-Point Type § 1946 Termination of Periodic Tenancy — Notice Requirements (30-Day Rule) § 1946.1 60-Day Notice — Residential Tenancies § 1946.2 Just Cause Required for Termination — AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act) § 1946.3 Social Security Tenant Protection Act of 2025 § 1946.5 Lodger Removal — Owner-Occupied Dwelling (Single Lodger) § 1946.7 Early Termination — Victims of Abuse § 1946.8 Right to Summon Emergency or Law Enforcement Assistance — Cannot Be Restricted § 1946.9 Tenant Screening — Prohibited Adverse Actions Related to Abuse or Violence § 1947 When Rent Is Payable § 1947.1 Unbundled Parking — New Large Residential Properties § 1947.3 Acceptable Forms of Rent Payment § 1947.5 Smoking Prohibition — Landlord's Right to Establish Policy § 1947.6 Electric Vehicle Charging Stations — Right to Install § 1947.12 Rent Increase Cap — 5% + CPI § 1947.13 Rent Cap — Transition from Affordable Housing Restrictions § 1948 Attornment to a Stranger — Void Without Consent § 1949 Tenant's Duty to Inform Landlord of Proceedings § 1950 Letting Part of a Room — Right to Whole Room § 1950.1 Reusable Tenant Screening Reports § 1950.5 Security Deposits — Residential § 1950.6 Application Screening Fees § 1950.7 Security Deposits — Commercial / Non-Residential § 1950.8 Commercial Leases — Prohibition on Undisclosed Payments § 1950.9 Commercial Leases — Small/Nonprofit Tenants (CAM Charges) §§ 1951–1952.8 Breach of Lease — Lessor's Remedies § 1953 Void Lease Provisions § 1954 Landlord's Right to Enter Dwelling Unit § 1954.05 General Assignment for Benefit of Creditors — Right to Occupy Business Premises § 1954.06 Positive Rent Reporting — Assisted Housing Developments § 1954.07 Positive Rent Reporting — General Residential Landlords § 1954.071 Disaster Displaced Guests in Lodging — Not a Tenant for 270 Days
§ 1940

Scope — Who Is Covered

(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), this chapter shall apply to all persons who hire dwelling units located within this state including tenants, lessees, boarders, lodgers, and others, however denominated.

(b) The term "persons who hire" shall not include a person who maintains either of the following:
(1) Transient occupancy in a hotel, motel, residence club, or other facility when the transient occupancy is or would be subject to tax under Section 7280 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
(2) Occupancy at a hotel or motel where the innkeeper retains a right of access to and control of the dwelling unit and the hotel or motel provides or offers all of the following services to all of the residents: (A) Facilities for the safeguarding of personal property pursuant to Section 1860; (B) Central telephone service; (C) Maid, mail, and room services; (D) Occupancy for periods of less than seven days; (E) Food service provided by a food establishment located on or adjacent to the premises.

(c) "Dwelling unit" means a structure or the part of a structure that is used as a home, residence, or sleeping place by one person who maintains a household or by two or more persons who maintain a common household.
💡 General Comment
Defines who is covered by California landlord-tenant law. Transient hotel/motel occupants are excluded.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1996
§ 1940.05

Definition — Immigration or Citizenship Status

"Immigration or citizenship status" includes a perception that the person has a particular immigration status or citizenship status, or that the person is associated with a person who has, or is perceived to have, a particular immigration status or citizenship status.
💡 General Comment
Broad definition ensuring protections apply based on perceived as well as actual immigration status.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2017
§ 1940.1

Residential Hotels — Prohibition on Forced Move-Out to Maintain Transient Status

(a) No person may require an occupant of a residential hotel, as defined in Section 50519 of the Health and Safety Code, to move, or to check out and reregister, before the expiration of 30 days occupancy if a purpose is to have that occupant maintain transient occupancy status pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 1940. Evidence that an occupant was required to check out and reregister shall create a rebuttable presumption of the purpose referred to in this subdivision.

(b) Any violation of subdivision (a) is punishable by a civil penalty of five hundred dollars ($500). The prevailing party shall be entitled to reasonable attorney's fees.
💡 General Comment
Prevents residential hotel operators from forcing check-outs to keep guests classified as transients and deny tenant protections.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2004
§ 1940.2

Landlord Harassment to Force Vacancy — Unlawful

(a) It is unlawful for a landlord to do any of the following for the purpose of influencing a tenant to vacate a dwelling:
(1) Engage in conduct that violates subdivision (a) of Section 484 of the Penal Code (theft by fraud or force).
(2) Engage in conduct that violates Section 518 of the Penal Code (extortion).
(3) Use, or threaten to use, force, willful threats, or menacing conduct constituting a course of conduct that interferes with the tenant's quiet enjoyment of the premises in violation of Section 1927 that would create an apprehension of harm in a reasonable person.
(4) Commit a significant and intentional violation of Section 1954 (unlawful entry).
(5) Threaten to disclose information regarding or relating to the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant, occupant, or other person known to the landlord to be associated with a tenant or occupant.

(b) A tenant who prevails in a civil action to enforce rights under this section is entitled to a civil penalty not to exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000) for each violation.

(c) A good-faith warning notice regarding tenant conduct that violates the rental agreement is not a violation of this section.

(d) This section does not enlarge or diminish a landlord's right to terminate a tenancy pursuant to existing state or local law.
💡 General Comment
Protects tenants from harassment tactics used to pressure them to leave. Immigration threats are explicitly prohibited.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2017
§ 1940.3

Immigration Status — No Inquiry or Disclosure by Landlord

(a) A public entity shall not compel a landlord or agent to make any inquiry, compile, disclose, or report any information regarding the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant or prospective tenant.

(b) A landlord or agent shall not: (1) Make any inquiry regarding the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant or prospective tenant; (2) Require disclosure or certification concerning immigration status; (3) Disclose immigration status information for the purpose of harassing, retaliating, influencing a tenant to vacate, or recovering possession.

(c) This section does not prohibit: (1) Complying with federal legal obligations or court orders; (2) Requesting information to verify financial qualifications or identity.
💡 General Comment
Landlords cannot ask about or disclose immigration status. Does not prohibit standard financial/identity verification.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2017
§ 1940.35

Reporting Immigration Status to Authorities — Unlawful

(a) It is unlawful for a landlord to disclose to any immigration authority, law enforcement agency, or government agency information regarding the immigration or citizenship status of any tenant, occupant, or associated person for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, retaliating, influencing them to vacate, or recovering possession of the dwelling.

(b) If a court finds a violation, the court shall: (1) Order statutory damages between 6 and 12 times the monthly rent for each person whose status was disclosed; (2) Issue injunctive relief; (3) Notify the district attorney of a potential violation of Penal Code § 519.

(e) The court shall award attorney's fees and costs to the prevailing party.
💡 General Comment
Severe penalties — up to 12 months' rent in statutory damages — for disclosing tenant immigration status to authorities as retaliation.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2017
§ 1940.4

Political Signs — Tenant's Right to Display

(a) A landlord shall not prohibit a tenant from posting or displaying political signs relating to an election, legislative vote, referendum, recall, or issues before a public body.

(b) Political signs may be posted in the window or on the door of leased premises in a multifamily dwelling, or from the yard, window, door, balcony, or outside wall of a leased single-family dwelling.

(c) A landlord may prohibit signs that: (1) Exceed six square feet; (2) Violate local, state, or federal law; (3) Violate a lawful common interest development provision.

(d) A tenant shall post and remove signs in compliance with local ordinance time limits. If no local ordinance exists, the landlord may establish a reasonable period (beginning at least 90 days before the vote, ending at least 15 days after).
💡 General Comment
Tenants have a right to display political signs up to 6 square feet. Landlords cannot prohibit political expression.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2011
§ 1940.41

Personal Micromobility Devices — Storage Rights

(b) A landlord shall not prohibit a tenant from: (1) Owning personal micromobility devices; (2) Storing and recharging up to one compliant personal micromobility device in their dwelling unit per occupant, provided the device meets UL 2849/EN 15194 (e-bikes) or UL 2272/EN 17128 (e-scooters) safety standards, or is insured. This right does not apply if the landlord provides secure, long-term storage.

(d) A landlord may: require compliance with fire code and State Fire Marshal guidance on lithium-ion battery safety; prohibit repair or maintenance on batteries/motors within the unit; require compliant storage location.
💡 General Comment
Tenants may store one certified e-bike or e-scooter per occupant in their unit. Landlord may enforce fire safety rules but cannot ban them outright.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2023
§ 1940.45

Religious Items on Entry Doors — Right to Display

(a) A property owner shall not enforce or adopt a restriction prohibiting a religious item on any entry door or door frame of a dwelling.

(b) Restrictions are permissible only if the item: threatens public health or safety; hinders door operation; violates law; contains obscene content; or exceeds 36 by 12 square inches.
💡 General Comment
Tenants may display religious items on their entry door or door frame. Maximum size is 36 by 12 inches.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2019
§ 1940.5

Waterbeds — Landlord Cannot Refuse

An owner may not refuse to rent to, or continue to rent to, an otherwise qualified tenant solely on the basis of the tenant's possession of a waterbed or other liquid-filled bedding where the tenant: (a) Furnishes a valid waterbed insurance policy (minimum $100,000 coverage, Best's B+ rating); (b) Ensures conformity with floor load capacity; (c) Installs, maintains, and removes the bedding per manufacturer/retailer/state standards with 24-hour written notice; (d) Complies with the owner's reasonable structural specifications.

(g) Notwithstanding Section 1950.5, the owner may increase security deposit by one-half of one month's rent.
💡 General Comment
Landlords cannot discriminate against waterbed owners who provide proper insurance and follow installation requirements.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1996
§ 1940.6

Demolition Permit — Required Disclosure to Tenants

(a) An owner who applies to any public agency for a permit to demolish a residential dwelling unit shall give written notice of that fact: (1) To a prospective tenant before entering into a rental agreement, accepting screening fees, or accepting other writings; (2) To a current tenant before applying for the permit.

(b) The notice shall include the earliest possible approximate demolition date and the approximate date the tenancy will be terminated.

(c) Remedies include actual damages, moving expenses, and a civil penalty up to $2,500 per tenant, plus attorney's fees.
💡 General Comment
Landlords must disclose pending demolition permits to both current and prospective tenants before accepting applications or rent.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2002
§ 1940.7

Former Military Ordnance Location — Disclosure

(b) A landlord who has actual knowledge of any former federal or state ordnance location within one mile of the rental dwelling shall give written notice to a prospective tenant prior to execution of a rental agreement.

(c) "Former federal or state ordnance location" means an area identified by a government agency as once used for military training that may contain potentially explosive munitions.
💡 General Comment
Written disclosure required before lease signing if landlord knows of former military ordnance site within one mile.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 1989
§ 1940.8

Pest Control Contract — Notice to New Tenants

A landlord shall provide each new tenant with a copy of the notice provided by a registered structural pest control company pursuant to Business and Professions Code § 8538, if a contract for periodic pest control service has been executed.
💡 General Comment
New tenants must receive a copy of any existing periodic pest control contract notice at the start of the tenancy.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2000
§ 1940.8.5

Pesticide Notice Requirements — Landlord or Agent Application

(b) A landlord or authorized agent that applies any pesticide to a dwelling unit without a licensed pest control operator shall provide the tenant and adjacent impacted tenants with at least 24 hours' written notice containing: the pest to be controlled; name and brand of pesticide; required state caution language; and the approximate date, time, and frequency of application.

(c)(1) A landlord applying pesticide to a common area without a licensed operator shall post written notice in a conspicuous place containing the same information. Notice must be posted before application and remain for at least 24 hours after.

(d)(1) For routine scheduled pesticide applications in common areas, the landlord shall provide prior written notice to all dwelling unit tenants before initial application and to each new tenant before lease execution.
💡 General Comment
24-hour advance written notice required before pesticide application in units or common areas when no licensed operator is used.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2015
§ 1940.9

Shared Utility Meters — Disclosure and Agreement Required

(a) If a landlord does not provide separate gas/electric meters for each tenant's dwelling unit and the landlord knows that service through a tenant's meter serves an area outside the tenant's unit, the landlord must, prior to inception of tenancy or upon discovery: (1) Explicitly disclose that condition to the tenant; and (2) Either execute a mutual written agreement for the tenant to pay the cost of service outside the unit, or make other written arrangements for payment.

(b) If the landlord fails to comply, the tenant may seek a court order requiring the landlord to become the customer of record and to reimburse the tenant for payments made to the utility for service outside the tenant's unit.
💡 General Comment
Shared utility meters must be disclosed and a written cost-sharing agreement executed. Failure allows tenant to seek court-ordered reimbursement.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 1989
§ 1940.10

Personal Agriculture — Portable Containers Permitted

(b) A landlord shall permit a tenant to participate in personal agriculture in portable containers approved by the landlord in the tenant's private outdoor ground-level backyard area if: the tenant removes dead plant material; the crop does not interfere with maintenance; containers do not interfere with parking; and placement/location is determined by the landlord.

(d) A landlord may prohibit use of synthetic chemical herbicides, pesticides, and similar products.

(g) This section applies only to residential real property improved with a building containing not more than two units.
💡 General Comment
Tenants of 1-2 unit properties may grow plants in portable containers in private backyard areas. Applies only to single-family or duplex-type properties.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2014
§ 1940.20

Clotheslines and Drying Racks — Permitted in Private Area

(b) A tenant may use a clothesline or drying rack in the tenant's private area (outdoor or enclosed with wall/fence access from the premises door) if: it does not interfere with maintenance; does not create health/safety hazard or block doors/walkways; the tenant seeks landlord consent before affixing a clothesline to a building; and use complies with reasonable time/location restrictions and landlord approval.
💡 General Comment
Tenants may use clotheslines or drying racks in their private outdoor area. Landlord approval required before affixing anything to a building structure.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2015
§ 1941

Landlord's Duty to Put Premises in Habitable Condition

The lessor of a building intended for the occupation of human beings must, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, put it into a condition fit for such occupation, and repair all subsequent dilapidations thereof, which render it untenantable, except such as are mentioned in section 1929 (damage by tenant's own negligence or wrongful act).
💡 General Comment
Core habitability duty. Landlord must deliver and maintain habitable premises. Tenant-caused damage is excluded.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Code Amendments 1873-74
§ 1941.1

Standards of Habitability — Untenantable Conditions

(a) A dwelling shall be deemed untenantable for purposes of Section 1941 if it substantially lacks any of the following:
(1) Effective waterproofing and weather protection of roof and exterior walls, including unbroken windows and doors.
(2) Plumbing or gas facilities that conformed to applicable law at time of installation, maintained in good working order.
(3) A water supply capable of producing hot and cold running water, connected to a sewage disposal system approved under applicable law.
(4) Heating facilities that conformed with applicable law at time of installation, maintained in good working order.
(5) Electrical lighting, with wiring and equipment that conformed with applicable law at time of installation, maintained in good working order.
(6) Building, grounds, and appurtenances kept in every part clean, sanitary, and free from debris, filth, rubbish, garbage, rodents, and vermin.
(7) An adequate number of appropriate receptacles for garbage and rubbish, in clean condition and good repair.
(8) Floors, stairways, and railings maintained in good repair.
(9) A locking mail receptacle for each unit in a residential hotel. [Operative July 1, 2008.]
(10) A stove maintained in good working order and capable of safely generating heat for cooking purposes. [Only applies to leases entered into, amended, or extended on or after January 1, 2026. A recalled stove is not capable of safely generating heat.]
(11)(A) A refrigerator maintained in good working order and capable of safely storing food. [Only applies to leases entered into, amended, or extended on or after January 1, 2026.] (B) A tenant and landlord may mutually agree in the lease that the tenant will provide their own refrigerator, provided the lease includes required disclosure language, gives the tenant a 30-day opt-out right, and the landlord does not condition tenancy on the tenant supplying a refrigerator.

(b) The stove and refrigerator requirements (paragraphs (10) and (11)) do not apply to: permanent supportive housing; single-room occupancy units; residential hotels; or housing facilities with shared or communal kitchens (including assisted living).

(c)(1) A landlord shall repair or replace a stove or refrigerator subject to recall within 30 days of receiving notice.
💡 General Comment
Lists minimum habitability standards. Stove and refrigerator requirements added effective January 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1941.1.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1941.2

Tenant's Obligations — Forfeiture of Repair Rights

(a) No duty to repair arises under §§ 1941 or 1942 if the tenant is in substantial violation of obligations to: (1) Keep their part of the premises clean and sanitary; (2) Dispose of garbage properly; (3) Properly use and operate electrical, gas, and plumbing fixtures; (4) Prevent willful or wanton damage by persons on the premises with the tenant's permission; (5) Occupy the premises as an abode.

This exemption applies only where the tenant's violation contributes substantially to or interferes substantially with the landlord's repair obligation.
💡 General Comment
Landlord's duty to repair is excused when tenant's own conduct substantially causes or worsens the uninhabitable condition.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1979
§ 1941.3

Deadbolt Locks and Window Security Devices Required

(a) On and after July 1, 1998, a landlord shall: (1) Install and maintain an operable dead bolt lock on each main swinging entry door of a dwelling unit extending at least 13/16 of an inch into the doorjamb; (2) Install and maintain operable window security or locking devices for windows designed to be opened (excluding louvered, casement, and windows >12 ft. vertically or >6 ft. horizontally from ground); (3) Install compliant locking mechanisms on exterior doors providing ingress/egress to common areas in multifamily developments.

(b) The tenant shall notify the owner of an inoperable deadbolt or window device. The landlord is not liable unless failing to correct within a reasonable time after actual or reported notice.

(c) Tenant remedies for violations include rights under §§ 1942, 1942.4, 1942.5, breach of contract action, and injunctive relief. In an unlawful detainer, tenant may raise the violation as an affirmative defense.

(f) This section does not apply to any building designated as historically significant.
💡 General Comment
Deadbolts must extend at least 13/16 inch into doorjamb. Window locks required on all openable windows (with limited exceptions). Effective July 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1941.3.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1941.4

Telephone Jack and Inside Wiring — Landlord's Duty

The lessor of a building intended for residential occupation shall be responsible for installing at least one usable telephone jack, placing and maintaining the inside telephone wiring in good working order, and ensuring the inside telephone wiring meets the applicable standards of the California Electrical Code. The lessor shall not restrict access by the telephone utility to its network facilities up to the demarcation point.
💡 General Comment
Landlord must install at least one functional telephone jack and maintain inside wiring to code.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2013
§ 1941.5

Lock Changes for Victims of Abuse or Violence

(a) This section applies where a person alleged to have committed abuse or violence against the eligible tenant (or their immediate family or household member) is NOT a tenant of the same dwelling unit.

(b) A landlord shall, at the landlord's own expense, change the locks of the eligible tenant's dwelling unit within 24 hours of the eligible tenant's written request accompanied by qualifying documentation, and shall give the eligible tenant a key to the new locks.

(c)(1) If the landlord fails to change locks within 24 hours, the eligible tenant may change the locks without permission, notwithstanding any lease provision to the contrary. (2) The landlord shall reimburse the eligible tenant within 21 days. The tenant must change locks in a workmanlike manner, notify the landlord within 24 hours, and provide the landlord with a key.

(d) Documentation must include one of: (1) A copy of a protective order; (2) A police report; (3) Documentation from a qualified third party (health practitioner, DV counselor, SA counselor, human trafficking caseworker, victim of violent crime advocate); or (4) Any other documentation reasonably verifying the abuse or violence occurred.

(f) "Eligible tenant" means a tenant who is a victim, or who has an immediate family or household member who is a victim, and is not alleged to have committed the abuse or violence.
💡 General Comment
Landlord must change locks at own expense within 24 hours for abuse victims when the abuser is not a co-tenant. Tenant self-help remedy available if landlord fails to act.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Repealed and added by Stats. 2024
§ 1941.6

Lock Changes — Restrained Co-Tenant

(b) A landlord shall, at the landlord's own expense, change the locks of a protected tenant's dwelling unit within 24 hours of written request accompanied by a court order that excludes a co-tenant from the dwelling, and shall give the protected tenant a key.

(c)(1) If the landlord fails to act within 24 hours, the protected tenant may change the locks. The landlord shall reimburse within 21 days.

(d) If locks are changed pursuant to this section, the landlord is not liable to the excluded person.

(e) An excluded person remains liable under the lease for rent.
💡 General Comment
Where a court order excludes a co-tenant
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1941.6.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1941.7

Mold — Duty to Repair Arises Upon Notice

(a) No obligation to repair a dilapidation relating to mold under Health and Safety Code § 17920.3(a)(13) arises until the lessor has notice of the dilapidation, or if the tenant is in violation of § 1941.2.

(b) A landlord may enter to repair mold-related dilapidations in compliance with § 1954 (24-hour notice).
💡 General Comment
Landlord's mold repair duty begins upon notice. Tenant-caused mold (e.g.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1941.7.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1941.8

Disaster Remediation — Landlord's Duty

(a) For any structure intended for human habitation, a landlord must remediate dilapidations arising from a "disaster" (a natural or manmade emergency resulting in a presidential or gubernatorial emergency declaration) by: (1) Removing debris caused by the disaster; (2) Mitigating hazards, including mold, smoke, ash, asbestos, or water damage.

(b) Until a public health determination is made that disaster debris does not contain toxic substances, its presence at a rental unit is presumed to render the unit untenantable.

(c) The landlord shall comply within a reasonable time and follow all government cleaning protocols. Landlord must notify tenant in writing of compliance and offer to provide copies of any environmental studies.

(d) Unless lawfully terminated, the tenancy remains in effect and the tenant has the right to return at the same rental rate as soon as safe and practicable.
💡 General Comment
Added in response to California wildfires. Disaster debris is presumed to make a unit uninhabitable until cleared by public health officials. Tenant has right to return at same rent.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2025
§ 1941.9

Advance Rent Return — Destruction or Evacuation

(a)(1) When a residential tenancy is terminated due to destruction of the property (§ 1932(2) or § 1933(4)), the landlord shall return any advance rental payments covering the period after termination within 21 days.

(b) During any period in which a tenant is unable to occupy their rental unit due to a mandatory evacuation order pursuant to a declared disaster, the tenant's rent obligation is discharged for the evacuation period. If the tenant already paid rent for the evacuation period, the landlord shall return it within 10 calendar days after the evacuation order is lifted, or the tenant may deduct it from the next month's rent.
💡 General Comment
Tenant owes no rent during mandatory evacuation orders. Prepaid rent must be returned within 10 days of the evacuation order being lifted.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2025
§ 1942

Tenant's Repair-and-Deduct Remedy

(a) If within a reasonable time after written or oral notice to the landlord of dilapidations rendering the premises untenantable which the landlord ought to repair, the landlord neglects to do so, the tenant may repair the same where the cost does not exceed one month's rent and deduct the expenses from rent when due, or the tenant may vacate the premises and be discharged from further rent obligation as of the date of vacating. This remedy is not available more than twice in any 12-month period.

(b) If a tenant acts to repair and deduct after the 30th day following notice, there is a rebuttable presumption of reasonable time. Shorter notice is allowed if circumstances require.

(c) The remedy is not available if the condition was caused by the tenant's violation of §§ 1929 or 1941.2.
💡 General Comment
Tenant's self-help repair remedy. Costs capped at one month's rent; available no more than twice per year. 30 days after notice creates a rebuttable presumption of reasonableness.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1979
§ 1942.1

Waiver of Habitability Rights — Void (with Exception)

Any agreement by a lessee waiving or modifying rights under §§ 1941 or 1942 is void as contrary to public policy with respect to any condition rendering the premises untenantable, except that the lessor and lessee may agree in writing that the lessee shall undertake to improve, repair, or maintain all or stipulated portions of the dwelling as part of the consideration for rental.
💡 General Comment
Tenants cannot waive habitability rights. Exception: written agreement where tenant takes on specific repair duties as part of consideration (e.g.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1942.1.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1942.2

Utility Payment by Tenant — Deductible from Rent

A tenant who has made a payment to a utility pursuant to specified sections of the Public Utilities Code (§§ 777, 777.1, 10009, 10009.1, 12822, 12822.1, 16481, or 16481.1) or to a district pursuant to Government Code § 60371 may deduct the payment from rent.
💡 General Comment
When a tenant must pay utilities that are legally the landlord's obligation
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1942.2.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1942.3

Substandard Conditions — Rebuttable Presumption of Uninhabitability in Unlawful Detainer

(a) In an unlawful detainer action, a rebuttable presumption that the landlord has breached habitability requirements is created if ALL of the following exist: (1) The dwelling substantially lacks a § 1941.1 standard characteristic, or is declared substandard under Health and Safety Code § 17920.3; (2) A public officer notified the landlord in writing of the obligation to abate; (3) The conditions have existed and not been abated 60 days beyond the notice date without good cause; (4) The conditions were not caused by the tenant.
💡 General Comment
A powerful tenant defense in eviction cases. If substandard conditions persist 60+ days after official notice
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1942.3.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1942.4

Landlord May Not Demand Rent for Substandard Unit

(a) A landlord may not demand rent, collect rent, issue a notice of rent increase, or issue a three-day notice to pay or quit if ALL of the following pre-exist the demand: (1) The dwelling substantially lacks a § 1941.1 characteristic or is declared substandard; (2) A public officer has notified the landlord in writing of the obligation to abate; (3) Conditions have existed and not been abated 35 days beyond service of notice without good cause; (4) The conditions were not caused by the tenant.

(b) A landlord who violates this section is liable for actual damages plus special damages of $100–$5,000. The prevailing party is entitled to attorney's fees.
💡 General Comment
Landlord forfeits the right to collect rent or serve pay-or-quit notices when substandard conditions persist 35+ days after official notice.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2003
§ 1942.5

Retaliation by Landlord — Prohibited

(a) If the lessor retaliates against the lessee because of the exercise of the lessee's rights under this chapter or because of a complaint to an appropriate agency regarding habitability, and if the lessee is not in default in rent, the lessor may not recover possession, cause the lessee to quit involuntarily, increase rent, or decrease services within 180 days of any of the following:
(1) Tenant gives notice under § 1942, provides bed bug notice, or makes an oral habitability complaint to the lessor; (2) Tenant files a written complaint with an appropriate agency; (3) An inspection or citation results from the complaint; (4) Filing of a judicial or arbitration proceeding involving tenantability; (5) Entry of judgment or arbitration award adverse to the lessor on tenantability.

(c)(e) Reporting, or threatening to report, a tenant or persons associated with a tenant to immigration authorities is a form of retaliatory conduct prohibited under this section.

(d) It is also unlawful for a lessor to retaliate against a lessee because the lessee has lawfully organized or participated in a lessees' association or lawfully exercised any rights under the law.

(h) A lessor or agent who violates this section is liable for: (1) Actual damages; (2) Punitive damages of $100–$2,000 per retaliatory act where fraud, oppression, or malice is present. (i) Attorney's fees are awarded to the prevailing party.
💡 General Comment
180-day anti-retaliation window. Immigration threats/reporting explicitly prohibited as retaliation. Applies to any exercise of tenant rights — not just habitability.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2021
§ 1942.6

Entry onto Rental Property to Provide Tenant Rights Information — Not Trespass

Any person entering onto residential real property upon the invitation of an occupant, during reasonable hours or because of emergency circumstances, for the purpose of providing information regarding tenants' rights or to participate in a lessees' or tenants' association, shall not be liable in any criminal or civil action for trespass.
💡 General Comment
Tenant organizers and rights educators invited by tenants cannot be prosecuted for trespass when visiting during reasonable hours.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 1999
§ 1942.7

Declawing or Devocalizing Animals as Rental Condition — Prohibited

(a) A person who allows animals on premises shall not: (1) Advertise availability of real property in a manner designed to discourage applicants because their animal has not been declawed or devocalized; (2) Refuse to allow occupancy or otherwise deny real property because of a person's refusal to declaw or devocalize any animal; (3) Require any tenant or occupant to declaw or devocalize any animal allowed on the premises.

(c) Civil penalty for advertising violation: up to $1,000 per advertisement. For refusal/requirement violations: up to $1,000 per animal. Enforcement may be brought by city attorney, district attorney, or other prosecutorial entity.
💡 General Comment
Landlords who allow pets cannot condition tenancy on declawing or devocalizing animals. Penalties up to $1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1942.7.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1942.8

Bulk Internet Service — Tenant Opt-Out Right

(a) For any residential tenancy commenced, renewed, or continuing on a month-to-month or other periodic basis on or after January 1, 2026, a landlord shall allow the tenant to opt out of paying for any subscription from a third-party internet service provider offered in connection with the tenancy through a bulk-billing arrangement.

(b) A landlord shall not retaliate against a tenant for exercising this opt-out right.

(c) If the landlord violates subdivision (a), the tenant may deduct the cost of the subscription from rent.
💡 General Comment
Tenants may opt out of landlord-arranged bulk internet billing arrangements for leases starting or renewing on or after January 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1942.8.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1943

Presumed Month-to-Month Tenancy (Non-Residential)

A hiring of real property, other than lodgings and dwelling-houses, in places where there is no custom or usage on the subject, is presumed to be a month-to-month tenancy unless otherwise designated in writing; except that real property used for agricultural or grazing purposes is presumed to be for one year from its commencement unless otherwise expressed in the hiring.
💡 General Comment
Commercial and non-residential tenancies default to month-to-month if not otherwise specified. Agricultural land defaults to one year.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1953
§ 1944

Lodgings — Length of Hiring Presumed from Rent Period

A hiring of lodgings or a dwelling house for an unspecified term is presumed to have been made for such length of time as the parties adopt for the estimation of the rent. Thus a hiring at a monthly rate of rent is presumed to be for one month. In the absence of any agreement respecting the length of time or the rent, the hiring is presumed to be monthly.
💡 General Comment
Tenancy term defaults to the rent payment interval. No payment schedule specified defaults to monthly.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Enacted 1872.
§ 1945

Holdover — Renewal on Same Terms

If a lessee of real property remains in possession thereof after the expiration of the hiring, and the lessor accepts rent from him, the parties are presumed to have renewed the hiring on the same terms and for the same time, not exceeding one month when the rent is payable monthly, nor in any case one year.
💡 General Comment
Accepting rent after lease expiration creates a presumed renewal on identical terms. Maximum holdover period is one month for monthly tenancies.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Enacted 1872.
§ 1945.5

Automatic Renewal Clauses — Must Be in Bold 8-Point Type

Any term of a lease executed after the effective date of this section for the hiring of residential real property that provides for the automatic renewal or extension of the lease if the lessee remains in possession after expiration or fails to give notice of intent not to renew shall be voidable by the party who did not prepare the lease, unless such renewal provision appears in at least eight-point boldface type in the body of the lease agreement and a recital of the fact that such provision is contained in the body of the agreement also appears in at least eight-point boldface type immediately prior to the place where the lessee executes the agreement.
💡 General Comment
Auto-renewal clauses must appear in 8-point boldface in the lease body AND be recited again in 8-point boldface near the tenant's signature line or they are voidable.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1976
§ 1946

Termination of Periodic Tenancy — Notice Requirements (30-Day Rule)

(a) A hiring of real property, for a term not specified by the parties, is deemed to be renewed at the end of the term implied by law unless one of the parties gives written notice to the other of the party's intention to terminate, at least as long before the expiration as the term of the hiring itself, not exceeding 30 days; provided that as to tenancies from month to month, either party may terminate by giving at least 30 days' written notice at any time. Rent is due and payable to and including the date of termination.

Notice shall be given in the manner prescribed in CCP § 1162 or by certified/registered mail. In addition, a lessee may give notice by sending a copy by certified/registered mail to the agent of the lessor to whom the lessee paid rent for the prior month, or by personal delivery to that agent.

The notice given by the lessor shall also contain, in substantially the same form, the following: "State law permits former tenants to reclaim abandoned personal property left at the former address of the tenant, subject to certain conditions..."

(b) A landlord or its agent shall not charge a tenant a fee for serving, posting, or otherwise delivering any notice described in this section.
💡 General Comment
30-day written notice required to terminate a month-to-month tenancy. Landlord notices must include abandoned property reclaim language. No fee may be charged for serving notice.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2024
§ 1946.1

60-Day Notice — Residential Tenancies

(b) An owner giving notice to terminate a residential tenancy shall give at least 60 days prior notice.

(c) Notwithstanding (b), only 30 days prior notice is required if the tenant or resident has resided in the dwelling or occupied the property for less than one year.

(d) Notwithstanding (b), only 30 days prior notice is required if: (1) the dwelling is alienable separately from other units; (2) the owner has contracted to sell to a bona fide purchaser and has established an escrow; (3) the purchaser is a natural person; (4) notice is given no more than 120 days after escrow is established; (5) notice was not previously given; (6) the purchaser in good faith intends to reside in the property for at least one full year.

(h) Notice given by an owner under this section must include the abandoned property reclaim language (same as § 1946(a)).

(i) A landlord or its agent shall not charge a tenant a fee for serving, posting, or otherwise delivering any notice described in this section.
💡 General Comment
60-day notice required to terminate tenancy when tenant has lived there 1+ year. 30-day notice allowed for tenancies under 1 year or qualifying owner-move-in sale situations.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2024
§ 1946.2

Just Cause Required for Termination — AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act)

(a) After a tenant has continuously and lawfully occupied a residential real property for 12 months, the owner shall not terminate a tenancy without just cause, which shall be stated in the written notice to terminate.

(b) "Just cause" means either at-fault just cause or no-fault just cause:
(1) AT-FAULT JUST CAUSE: (A) Default in payment of rent; (B) Breach of a material lease term after written notice to cure; (C) Maintaining or permitting a nuisance; (D) Committing waste; (E) Refusal to execute a written renewal of lease of similar duration and terms; (F) Criminal activity on the property or criminal threats directed at the owner or agent; (G) Assigning or subletting in violation of the lease; (H) Refusal to allow the owner to enter as authorized by law; (I) Using the premises for an unlawful purpose; (J) Employee/agent/licensee failure to vacate after termination; (K) Tenant fails to deliver possession after providing written notice of intention to terminate.
(2) NO-FAULT JUST CAUSE: (A) Owner or qualifying relative intends to occupy as primary residence for minimum 12 continuous months; (B) Withdrawal of the property from the rental market; (C) Compliance with a government agency or court order to vacate; (D) Intent to demolish or substantially remodel the property.

(d)(1) For a no-fault just cause termination, the owner shall provide a direct relocation payment equal to one month's rent within 15 calendar days of service of notice, or waive in writing the payment of rent for the final month.

(e) EXEMPTIONS — Does not apply to: transient/tourist hotel occupancy; nonprofit hospital/religious/care facilities; school dormitories; owner-shared bathroom or kitchen; single-family owner-occupied; two-unit single-structure owner-occupied; housing with certificate of occupancy within previous 15 years; single-family homes/condos not owned by REIT/corp/LLC (with written exemption notice); deed-restricted affordable housing.

(g) An owner's failure to comply renders the written termination notice void.

(h) Willful violations subject owner to actual damages, attorney's fees, and up to three times actual damages plus punitive damages.
💡 General Comment
Just cause eviction law (AB 1482). After 12 months of occupancy
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2024. Expires January 1
§ 1946.3

Social Security Tenant Protection Act of 2025

(c) A tenant of residential real property may assert Social Security hardship as an affirmative defense in any unlawful detainer proceeding based on nonpayment of rent. The tenant must provide evidence that: (1) Social Security benefits typically received by the tenant's household have been terminated, delayed, or reduced due to no fault of the tenant; and (2) the Social Security hardship prevented the tenant from paying the unpaid rent.

(d) If proven, the court shall stay the unlawful detainer action until the earlier of: (1) 14 days after the tenant's Social Security benefits are restored; or (2) six months after the stay is issued.

(e)(2) Within 14 days of benefits being restored, the tenant must either pay all past due rent or enter into a mutually agreed payment plan with the owner.

(h) This affirmative defense applies only to unlawful detainer actions based on nonpayment of rent.
💡 General Comment
Tenants whose Social Security benefits were disrupted through no fault of their own may pause eviction for nonpayment for up to 6 months. Applies only to SSA benefit interruptions.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2025
§ 1946.5

Lodger Removal — Owner-Occupied Dwelling (Single Lodger)

(a) The hiring of a room by a lodger on a periodic basis within a dwelling unit occupied by the owner may be terminated by either party giving written notice to the other of his or her intention to terminate the hiring, at least as long before the expiration of the term of the hiring as specified in Section 1946.

(b) Upon expiration of the notice period provided in the notice of termination given pursuant to subdivision (a), any right of the lodger to remain in the dwelling unit or any part thereof is terminated by operation of law. The lodger's removal from the premises may thereafter be effected pursuant to the provisions of Section 602.3 of the Penal Code or other applicable provisions of law.

(c) As used in this section, "lodger" means a person contracting with the owner of a dwelling unit for a room or room and board within the dwelling unit personally occupied by the owner, where the owner retains a right of access to all areas of the dwelling unit occupied by the lodger and has overall control of the dwelling unit.

(d) This section applies only to owner-occupied dwellings where a single lodger resides. Nothing in this section shall be construed to determine or affect in any way the rights of persons residing as lodgers in an owner-occupied dwelling where more than one lodger resides.
💡 General Comment
A single lodger in an owner-occupied home can be removed via standard notice (30 days for month-to-month) under criminal trespass law (Penal Code § 602.3) — NOT unlawful detainer.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 1986
§ 1946.7

Early Termination — Victims of Abuse

Violence
📝 California Comment
or Crime
💡 General Comment
(a) A tenant may notify the landlord of intention to terminate the tenancy if the tenant, a household member, or an immediate family member was the victim of: (1) Domestic violence (Family Code § 6211); (2) Sexual assault (Penal Code §§ 261 et seq.); (3) Stalking (§ 1708.7); (4) Human trafficking (Penal Code § 236.1); (5) Elder or dependent adult abuse (Welfare & Institutions Code § 15610.07); (6) A crime causing bodily injury or death; (7) A crime involving exhibition or use of a firearm or deadly weapon; (8) A crime involving use of force or threat of force against the victim.

(b) Notice must be in writing with one of: (1) A copy of a protective or restraining order; (2) A written police report; (3) Documentation from a qualified third party using the prescribed Tenant Statement form; (4) Any other documentation reasonably verifying the crime.

(d) Notice to terminate shall be given within 180 days of the qualifying order, report, or act.

(e) The tenant is responsible for rent for no more than 14 calendar days following the giving of notice. The tenant is released without penalty from any further rent obligation.

(f) The landlord shall not require forfeiture of security deposit. Tenant shall not be considered to have breached the lease.

(j) A landlord shall not refuse to rent to a prospective tenant solely because that tenant previously exercised rights under this section.

(k) A landlord who violates this section is liable for actual damages plus statutory damages of $100–$5,000.
§ 1946.8

Right to Summon Emergency or Law Enforcement Assistance — Cannot Be Restricted

(b) Any provision in a rental or lease agreement that prohibits or limits a tenant's, resident's, or other person's right to summon law enforcement or emergency assistance as, or on behalf of, a victim of abuse, a victim of crime, or an individual in an emergency shall be void as contrary to public policy.

(c) A landlord shall not impose, or threaten to impose, penalties on a tenant or resident who exercises the right to summon law enforcement or emergency assistance.

(f)(1) In an unlawful detainer action, a tenant may raise as an affirmative defense that the landlord violated this section. (2) A rebuttable presumption of an affirmative defense arises if the landlord files an unlawful detainer complaint within 30 days of a tenant summoning law enforcement.
💡 General Comment
Lease clauses restricting the right to call 911 or police are void. Eviction within 30 days of a tenant calling law enforcement creates a rebuttable presumption of retaliation.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2021
§ 1946.9

Tenant Screening — Prohibited Adverse Actions Related to Abuse or Violence

(a) A landlord or agent shall not make an adverse action (denial or disparate terms) based on: (1) An allegation that the prospective tenant breached a lease stemming from an act of abuse or violence against the tenant (who did not commit the abuse); (2) The prospective tenant having previously requested lock changes under §§ 1941.5 or 1941.6; (3) The prospective tenant, or their immediate family or household member, having been a victim of abuse or violence; (4) The prospective tenant or a guest having previously summoned law enforcement or emergency assistance.

(b) A landlord who violates this section is liable for: (1) Actual damages; (2) Statutory damages of $100–$5,000.
💡 General Comment
Landlords cannot deny housing or impose worse terms because an applicant is a domestic violence victim
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: or called for emergency help.
§ 1947

When Rent Is Payable

When there is no usage or contract to the contrary, rents are payable at the termination of the holding, when it does not exceed one year. If the holding is by the day, week, month, quarter, or year, rent is payable at the termination of the respective periods, as it successively becomes due.
💡 General Comment
Default rule: rent is due at the end of each rental period. Most modern leases contractually override this to require advance payment.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Enacted 1872.
§ 1947.1

Unbundled Parking — New Large Residential Properties

(a)(b) If an owner of a qualifying residential property (new buildings with ≥16 units, certificate of occupancy on or after January 1, 2025, in Alameda, Fresno, Los Angeles, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Joaquin, Santa Clara, Shasta, or Ventura County) provides parking with the property, the owner shall unbundle parking from the price of rent. All off-street parking shall be subject to a separate rental agreement addendum.

(c)(1) A tenant shall have the right of first refusal to parking spaces built for their property.

(d)(1) A tenant's failure to pay a separately leased parking fee shall not form the basis of any unlawful detainer action.
💡 General Comment
Applies to new large apartment buildings (16+ units) in 10 specified California counties. Parking must be offered separately from rent; nonpayment of parking fee is not grounds for eviction.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2024
§ 1947.3

Acceptable Forms of Rent Payment

(a)(1) A landlord shall allow a tenant to pay rent and security deposit by at least one form of payment that is neither cash nor electronic funds transfer.

(2) A landlord may demand cash as the exclusive form of payment only if the tenant has previously attempted to pay with a check drawn on insufficient funds or instructed the drawee to stop payment — and only for a period not exceeding three months following the incident, with written notice required.

(3) A landlord shall allow a tenant to pay rent through a third party, subject to the third party providing a signed acknowledgment that they are not a tenant of the premises.

(b) A landlord shall not charge a tenant any fee for payment by check for rent or security deposit.
💡 General Comment
At least one non-cash
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1947.3.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1947.5

Smoking Prohibition — Landlord's Right to Establish Policy

(a) A landlord may prohibit the smoking of cigarettes or other tobacco products on the property or in any building, dwelling unit, or other interior or exterior area.

(b) Every lease entered into on or after January 1, 2012, for a residential dwelling unit on property where smoking has been prohibited shall include a provision specifying the areas where smoking is prohibited.

(b)(2) A prohibition against smoking in any portion previously permitted constitutes a change of terms of tenancy, requiring adequate written notice under § 827.
💡 General Comment
Landlords may create non-smoking properties including outdoor areas. Adding new no-smoking zones to existing tenancies requires proper notice under § 827.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2016
§ 1947.6

Electric Vehicle Charging Stations — Right to Install

(a) For any lease executed, extended, or renewed on and after July 1, 2015, a lessor of a dwelling shall approve a written request of a lessee to install an electric vehicle charging station at a parking space allotted for the lessee.

(b) This section does not apply if: EV charging stations already exist in a ratio ≥10% of designated parking spaces; parking is not provided in the lease; there are fewer than five parking spaces; or the dwelling is subject to residential rent control (with limited exceptions).

(g) The lessee's request must include agreement to: comply with lessor's installation standards; engage a licensed contractor; provide certificate of insurance naming the lessor as additional insured (coverage up to 10x annual rent); pay all costs for installation, maintenance, and electricity usage.
💡 General Comment
Tenants in allotted parking spaces may install EV chargers in leases on/after July 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1947.6.&lawCode=CIV
§ 1947.12

Rent Increase Cap — 5% + CPI

Maximum 10% [AB 1482]
📝 California Comment
(a)(1) An owner of residential real property shall not, over the course of any 12-month period, increase the gross rental rate for a dwelling or unit more than 5 percent plus the percentage change in the cost of living, or 10 percent, whichever is lower, of the lowest gross rental rate charged for that dwelling or unit at any time during the 12 months prior to the effective date of the increase.

(2) If the same tenant remains in occupancy over any 12-month period, the gross rental rate shall not be increased in more than two increments over that 12-month period.

(b) For a new tenancy in which no tenant from the prior tenancy remains in lawful possession, the owner may establish the initial rental rate not subject to subdivision (a).

(d) EXEMPTIONS — Does not apply to: (1) Deed-restricted affordable housing; (2) School/college dormitories; (3) Housing subject to stricter local rent control; (4) Housing with certificate of occupancy within previous 15 years (except mobilehomes); (5) Single-family homes/condos not owned by REITs/corporations/LLCs (with written exemption notice); (6) Two-unit single-structure property where owner occupies one unit as principal residence.

(g) CPI is calculated using U.S. BLS CPI-U for the metropolitan area; for increases before August 1, the April-to-April change from the prior two years; for increases on or after August 1, the April-to-April change from the current and prior year.

(k)(1) Violations subject owner to injunctive relief, damages equal to the excess, attorney's fees (discretionary), and up to three times excess damages for willful/fraudulent/malicious violations.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: whichever is lower
§ 1947.13

Rent Cap — Transition from Affordable Housing Restrictions

(a) Upon the expiration of rental restrictions, an owner of an assisted housing development who demonstrates compliance with Government Code §§ 65863.10, 65863.11, and 65863.13 may establish the initial unassisted rental rate. Any subsequent rent increase shall be subject to § 1947.12.
💡 General Comment
When affordable housing deed restrictions expire
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: but subsequent increases are subject to the AB 1482 rent cap. Expires January 1
§ 1948

Attornment to a Stranger — Void Without Consent

The attornment of a tenant to a stranger is void, unless it is made with the consent of the landlord, or in consequence of a judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction.
💡 General Comment
A tenant's recognition of a new landlord (attornment) is void without the original landlord's consent or a court order.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Enacted 1872.
§ 1949

Tenant's Duty to Inform Landlord of Proceedings

Every tenant who receives notice of any proceeding to recover the real property occupied by him or her, or the possession thereof, shall immediately inform the landlord of the proceeding, and also deliver to the landlord any written notice, and is responsible to the landlord for all damages sustained by reason of any omission to do so.
💡 General Comment
Tenants must promptly notify their landlord upon receiving notice of any proceedings threatening the property. Failure to do so makes the tenant liable for resulting damages.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 1989
§ 1950

Letting Part of a Room — Right to Whole Room

One who hires part of a room for a dwelling is entitled to the whole of the room, notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary; and if a landlord lets a room as a dwelling for more than one family, the person to whom he first lets any part of it is entitled to the possession of the whole room for the term agreed upon, and every tenant in the building, under the same landlord, is relieved from all obligation to pay rent to him while such double letting of any room continues.
💡 General Comment
A tenant who rents part of a room is entitled to the whole room. Double-letting a single room as a dwelling for multiple families suspends all tenants' rent obligations in the building.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Enacted 1872.
§ 1950.1

Reusable Tenant Screening Reports

(a) A reusable tenant screening report shall include: name; contact information; verification of employment; last known address; and eviction history check, consistent with applicable law.

(c) A landlord may elect to accept reusable tenant screening reports.

(d) If an applicant provides a reusable tenant screening report to a landlord that accepts them, the landlord shall not charge an application screening fee or a fee to access the report.

(e) A 'reusable tenant screening report' means a consumer report prepared within the previous 30 days at the applicant's expense by a consumer reporting agency, made available to the landlord at no cost.
💡 General Comment
Landlords who accept reusable screening reports (prepared within 30 days at applicant's expense) cannot charge any screening or access fees for those applicants.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2022
§ 1950.5

Security Deposits — Residential

(a) This section applies to security for a rental agreement for residential property used as the dwelling of the tenant.

(b) "Security" means any payment, fee, deposit, or charge imposed at the beginning of the tenancy to be used to reimburse the landlord for: (1) Tenant default in payment of rent; (2) Repair of damages caused by the tenant, exclusive of ordinary wear and tear; (3) Cleaning necessary to return the unit to the same level of cleanliness at inception; (4) To remedy tenant defaults in obligations to restore, replace, or return personal property.

(c)(1) A landlord shall not demand or receive security in excess of one month's rent in addition to any rent for the first month paid on or before initial occupancy. [Applies to security collected on or after July 1, 2024.]

(5)(A) Exception: A landlord who is a natural person or LLC (all members natural persons) who owns no more than two residential rental properties collectively including no more than four dwelling units may demand or receive up to two months' rent. (B) This exception does not apply if the prospective tenant is a service member.

(d) Any security shall be held by the landlord for the tenant. The tenant's claim to the security is prior to the claim of any creditor of the landlord.

(e)(1) The landlord may claim only amounts reasonably necessary for purposes in subdivision (b).

(2)(A) The landlord shall not claim for damages that preexisted the tenancy, for ordinary wear and tear (including cumulative effects across tenancies), or require a tenant to pay for professional carpet cleaning or other professional cleaning services unless reasonably necessary.

(f)(1) The landlord shall notify the tenant in writing of the option to request a pre-move-out inspection (no earlier than two weeks before end of tenancy) and the right to be present. At least 48 hours' prior written notice of the date and time required.

(f)(2) Based on the inspection, the landlord shall give the tenant an itemized statement specifying repairs or cleanings proposed as the basis for deductions, so the tenant may remedy them.

(g)(1) For tenancies beginning on or after July 1, 2025, the landlord shall take photographs of the unit immediately before or at inception of the tenancy.

(g)(2) Beginning April 1, 2025, the landlord shall take photographs within a reasonable time after tenant vacates, before repairs/cleaning, and again after.

(h)(1) No later than 21 calendar days after the tenant has vacated the premises, the landlord shall furnish the tenant a copy of an itemized statement indicating the basis for and amount of any security received and the disposition of the security, and shall return any remaining portion.

(h)(2) The landlord shall include copies of documents showing charges: for landlord/employee work — description, time, and hourly rate; for contractor work — copy of bill/invoice/receipt; for materials — copy of bill/invoice/receipt; and photographs with written cost explanation.

(h)(3) If work cannot reasonably be completed within 21 days, the landlord may provide a good faith estimate, then complete final documentation within 14 calendar days of completing the repair.

(m) Bad faith retention of security may subject the landlord to statutory damages of up to twice the amount of the security, in addition to actual damages. Burden of proof is on the landlord.

(n) A lease or rental agreement shall not contain a provision characterizing any security as 'nonrefundable.'
💡 General Comment
California's comprehensive security deposit law. One month's rent maximum (effective July 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: ≤4 units
§ 1950.6

Application Screening Fees

(a) A landlord or agent may charge an applicant an application screening fee to cover the costs of obtaining information about the applicant, including personal reference checks and consumer credit reports.

(b) The fee shall not exceed the actual out-of-pocket costs or thirty dollars ($30) per applicant, whichever is less. The $30 limit may be adjusted annually by the CPI beginning January 1, 1998.

(c)(1) A landlord shall not charge a screening fee when they know or should have known that no rental unit is available at that time or will be available within a reasonable period of time.

(c)(2) A landlord may charge a screening fee only if offering either: (A) An application process that considers completed applications in order of receipt and approves the first qualifying applicant; or (B) A process that returns the entire screening fee to any applicant not selected within 7 days of selecting a tenant or 30 days of the application, whichever occurs first.

(d) The landlord shall provide the applicant with a receipt for the fee, itemizing out-of-pocket expenses and time spent.

(f) If a screening fee has been paid, the landlord shall provide a copy of the consumer credit report to the applicant within seven days of the landlord receiving the report.
💡 General Comment
Screening fees capped at $30 (CPI-adjusted from 1998 base). Cannot charge if no unit is available. Must provide receipt. Must provide copy of credit report within 7 days.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2025
§ 1950.7

Security Deposits — Commercial / Non-Residential

(a) Any payment or deposit whose primary function is to secure performance of a rental agreement for other than residential property is governed by this section.

(c) The landlord may claim the deposit only for: defaults in rent; repair of damages caused by the tenant; or cleaning on termination. Any remaining portion shall be returned within 30 days of landlord receiving possession (or 2 weeks for excess above one month's rent + last month's rent deposit, if applicable).

(f) Bad faith retention may subject the landlord or transferee to damages not to exceed $200, in addition to actual damages.
💡 General Comment
Commercial security deposit rules. Return within 30 days of receiving possession. Bad faith penalty capped at $200 (much lower than residential).
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2003
§ 1950.8

Commercial Leases — Prohibition on Undisclosed Payments

(b) It shall be unlawful to require payment of any money, including "key money" or lessor's attorney fees for lease preparation, as a condition of initiating, continuing, or renewing a lease or rental agreement, unless the amount is stated in the written lease.

(c) A person who violates this section is subject to a civil penalty of three times actual damages, plus attorney's fees and costs.
💡 General Comment
All fees associated with a commercial lease — including key money and attorney fees — must be stated in the written lease or they are unlawful. Penalty is triple damages.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2001
§ 1950.9

Commercial Leases — Small/Nonprofit Tenants (CAM Charges)

(a) A landlord of commercial real property shall not charge a qualified commercial tenant a fee to recover building operating costs unless: costs are allocated proportionately and documented; costs were incurred within 18 months or are reasonably expected within 12 months; the landlord gave prior notice of the tenant's right to inspect supporting documentation; documentation is provided within 30 days of written request; and the costs do not include expenses paid directly by a tenant or reimbursed by insurance.

(d) In an unlawful detainer based on failure to pay CAM charges, the qualified commercial tenant may raise non-compliance as an affirmative defense.

(h) "Qualified commercial tenant" means a microenterprise, restaurant with fewer than 10 employees, or nonprofit organization with fewer than 20 employees that has provided written notice and self-attestation to the landlord.
💡 General Comment
CAM (common area maintenance) charge transparency and documentation rules for small businesses and nonprofits. Affirmative defense available in eviction actions.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2024
§§ 1951–1952.8

Breach of Lease — Lessor's Remedies

These sections govern the lessor's remedies upon breach and abandonment:

§ 1951.2 — Upon lessee's breach and abandonment, the lease terminates and the lessor may recover the worth at the time of award of: (1) unpaid rent earned at termination; (2) unpaid rent between termination and award that could not reasonably have been avoided; (3) subject to conditions, the present value of unpaid rent for the balance of the term; and (4) other compensatory damages.

§ 1951.3 — Abandonment deemed established by notice procedure (14 days unpaid rent + 15/18 day abandonment notice).

§ 1951.4 — Where lease provides for it, lessor may continue lease in effect after breach and collect rent as it becomes due if lessee has unrestricted or reasonably limited right to sublet or assign.

§ 1951.5 — Liquidated damages clause governed by § 1671.

§ 1951.7 — Lessor must notify lessee of reletting upon lessee's written request where advance payment made.

§ 1952 — Unlawful detainer action does not affect other remedies.

§ 1952.3 — If possession is delivered to lessor before trial in unlawful detainer, the case becomes ordinary civil action.
💡 General Comment
California requires landlords to mitigate damages after a tenant abandons. Abandonment can be established by a statutory notice procedure. Landlords who elect to keep the lease in effect may continue collecting rent.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Various; §§ 1951–1952.8 added or amended individually.
§ 1953

Void Lease Provisions

(a) Any provision of a lease or rental agreement of a dwelling by which the lessee agrees to modify or waive any of the following rights shall be void as contrary to public policy: (1) Rights or remedies under §§ 1950.5 or 1954; (2) The right to assert a cause of action against the lessor which may arise in the future; (3) The right to a notice or hearing required by law; (4) Procedural rights in litigation involving rights and obligations as a tenant; (5) The right to have the landlord exercise a duty of care to prevent personal injury or property damage where that duty is imposed by law.

(b) Any provision of a lease or rental agreement of a dwelling by which the lessee agrees to modify or waive a statutory right (not void under subdivision (a)) shall be void unless the lease or rental agreement is presented to the lessee before taking actual possession.
💡 General Comment
Core tenant rights cannot be waived by lease provision. Any attempt to waive security deposit rights
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: right to sue
§ 1954

Landlord's Right to Enter Dwelling Unit

(a) A landlord may enter the dwelling unit only in the following cases: (1) In case of emergency; (2) To make necessary or agreed repairs, decorations, alterations or improvements, supply necessary or agreed services, or exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants, workers, or contractors, or to make an inspection pursuant to § 1950.5(f); (3) When the tenant has abandoned or surrendered the premises; (4) Pursuant to court order; (5) For purposes set forth in Chapter 2.5 (commencing with § 1954.201); (6) To comply with Health and Safety Code Article 2.2 (§ 17973).

(b) Except in cases of emergency or abandonment, entry may not be made during other than normal business hours unless the tenant consents to such entry at the time of entry.

(c) The landlord may not abuse the right of access or use it to harass the tenant.

(d)(1) Except as provided in subdivision (e), the landlord shall give the tenant reasonable written notice of intent to enter and enter only during normal business hours. The notice shall include the date, approximate time, and purpose of the entry. Notice may be personally delivered, left with someone of suitable age and discretion, or left on or near or under the usual entry door. Twenty-four hours shall be presumed to be reasonable notice. Notice may be mailed — mailing at least six days prior to an intended entry is presumed reasonable.

(d)(2) If the purpose is to exhibit the dwelling to prospective purchasers, notice may be given orally if the landlord has notified the tenant in writing within 120 days that the property is for sale.

(d)(3) The tenant and landlord may agree orally to an entry to make agreed repairs or supply agreed services (no written notice required), with a specific date and approximate time within one week.

(e) No notice of entry is required: (1) To respond to an emergency; (2) If the tenant is present and consents at the time of entry; (3) After the tenant has abandoned or surrendered the unit.
💡 General Comment
Landlord entry is restricted to specific allowed purposes. 24-hour written notice required (including date
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: and purpose). Emergency entry requires no notice. Oral agreement for repairs satisfies notice requirement.
§ 1954.05

General Assignment for Benefit of Creditors — Right to Occupy Business Premises

In any general assignment for the benefit of creditors, the assignee shall have the right to occupy, for a period of up to 90 days after the date of assignment, any business premises held under a lease by the assignor upon payment when due of the monthly rental reserved in the lease, notwithstanding any provision in the lease for termination upon assignment or insolvency.
💡 General Comment
Business insolvency assignee gets 90-day protection to continue occupying leased business premises despite anti-assignment clauses in the lease.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by renumbering Section 1954.1 by Stats. 2016
§ 1954.06

Positive Rent Reporting — Assisted Housing Developments

(a) Beginning July 1, 2021, any landlord of an assisted housing development shall offer each tenant obligated on the lease the option of having the tenant's rental payment information reported to at least one nationwide consumer reporting agency (credit bureau).

(b) For leases entered into on or after July 1, 2021, the offer shall be made at the time of the lease and at least annually thereafter.

(f) If a tenant elects rent reporting, the landlord may charge a fee not to exceed the lesser of actual cost or ten dollars ($10) per month. Nonpayment of this fee is not cause for termination and may not be deducted from the security deposit.

(h) A tenant who elects reporting may subsequently file a written request to stop. The tenant may not resume for at least six months.

(j) This section does not apply to assisted housing developments with 15 or fewer units, unless the landlord owns more than one such development and is a REIT, corporation, or LLC with a corporate member.
💡 General Comment
Affordable housing landlords must offer tenants the option to have on-time rent payments reported to credit bureaus. Maximum fee: $10/month or actual cost.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Amended by Stats. 2024
§ 1954.07

Positive Rent Reporting — General Residential Landlords

(a) Any landlord of a dwelling unit of residential real property shall offer any tenant obligated on the lease the option of having the tenant's positive rental payment information reported to at least one nationwide consumer reporting agency. Only positive (complete and timely) payment information may be reported — negative information shall not be reported.

(b) For leases entered into on or after April 1, 2025, the offer shall be made at the time of the lease and at least annually thereafter. For existing leases, the offer shall be made no later than April 1, 2025.

(g)(1) The landlord may charge a fee not to exceed the lesser of actual cost or ten dollars ($10) per month. If the landlord incurs no actual cost, no amount shall be charged.

(i) A tenant who elects reporting may file a written request to stop; the tenant may not resume for at least six months.

(j) This section does not apply to: (1) Landlords with 15 or fewer dwelling units (unless they own multiple buildings and are a REIT, corporation, or LLC with a corporate member); or (2) Assisted housing developments.
💡 General Comment
All residential landlords (16+ units) must offer tenants positive rent reporting to credit bureaus. ONLY positive payment history may be reported. Maximum fee: $10/month or actual cost.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Added by Stats. 2024
§ 1954.071

Disaster Displaced Guests in Lodging — Not a Tenant for 270 Days

(b) A guest residing in a hotel, motel, or licensed short-term lodging shall not be considered a person who hires pursuant to § 1940, nor have their lodging constitute a new tenancy, until the guest has resided in the lodging for 270 days, if the guest is residing in the lodging as a result of a disaster that substantially damaged, destroyed, or otherwise made uninhabitable their prior housing.

(c) If the lodging believes a guest is subject to subdivision (b), it shall provide a required written notice before or at check-in for any stay anticipated to exceed 30 days.

(d) The lodging shall provide a confirmation form for the guest to check whether the guest is displaced by a disaster or not.

(e)(1) If a guest subject to subdivision (b) has resided in a lodging for more than 30 days, the lodging operator shall provide at least 72 hours written notice before requiring the guest to vacate.

(e)(2) The 72-hour notice is not required if the guest: fails to pay charges when due; interferes with other guests; damages or threatens to damage property; or poses a risk of harm to others.
💡 General Comment
Disaster-displaced hotel/motel guests do not become tenants under California law until 270 days of continuous residence. Hotels must provide 72-hour eviction notice for stays beyond 30 days. Expires January 1
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=1954.071.&lawCode=CIV

🔍 Tenant Screening in California

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