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Santa Barbara County California
Santa Barbara County · California

Santa Barbara County Landlord-Tenant Law

Wine country, UCSB, and Vandenberg Space Force Base — a county where Santa Barbara city’s 1979 rent control ordinance coexists with AB 1482 in the unincorporated areas, SCRA demands attention near the base, and a bifurcated market spans from student Isla Vista to the storied South Coast

📍 County Seat: Santa Barbara — Santa Barbara County Superior Court
👥 ~445K residents — California’s 21st most populous county
⚖️ Superior Court • 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93121
🏘️ Santa Barbara city rent control (1979) • AB 1482 elsewhere • UCSB • Vandenberg SFB

Santa Barbara County Rental Market Overview

Santa Barbara County stretches 120 miles along the California coast from Ventura County in the south to San Luis Obispo County in the north, encompassing one of the most scenically diverse and economically layered rental markets in the state. The South Coast corridor — Santa Barbara city, Goleta, Carpinteria, and the unincorporated communities around them — anchors the county’s population and its most regulated rental environment. The Santa Ynez Valley wine country, running inland from the Gaviota coast through Solvang, Santa Ynez, Los Olivos, and Buellton, operates as a distinct rural economy built around viticulture, tourism, and agriculture. Lompoc and the Santa Maria Valley in the northern portion of the county form a separate housing market oriented around Vandenberg Space Force Base, agriculture, and light industry. These three sub-regions share a county government and a Superior Court but face meaningfully different legal frameworks, tenant profiles, and market dynamics.

For landlords, Santa Barbara County’s legal landscape is more complex than most Central Coast counties because Santa Barbara city operates under a local rent control ordinance enacted in 1979 — one of the older local rent stabilization programs still active in California. Properties within Santa Barbara city limits that fall under that ordinance face dual regulation: both the city’s rent stabilization rules and, where applicable, AB 1482’s just-cause eviction requirements. Outside the city, AB 1482 is the primary framework. The Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA CPI applies throughout the county for AB 1482 rent cap calculations. Vandenberg Space Force Base in the northern county creates a meaningful SCRA population in Lompoc and neighboring communities. And the University of California Santa Barbara in Isla Vista (part of Goleta) generates one of the densest university rental markets in the state.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat City of Santa Barbara
Major Cities / Communities Santa Barbara, Santa Maria, Lompoc, Goleta, Carpinteria, Solvang, Buellton, Isla Vista (unincorp.)
Population ~445K — California’s 21st most populous county
Top Employers Vandenberg Space Force Base, UC Santa Barbara, Cottage Health, wine & agriculture industry, tourism/hospitality
Median Rent ~$2,200–$3,200/mo (1BR); Isla Vista and South Coast significantly higher
Santa Barbara City Rent Control Yes — 1979 ordinance; applies to eligible units within city limits
AB 1482 Rent Cap (Outside RC) 5% + CPI (Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA), max 10% per year
SCRA Vandenberg Space Force Base — verify before adverse action in Lompoc area
Security Deposit Cap 1 month’s rent (Civil Code § 1950.5; effective July 1, 2024)

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment of Rent 3-Day Notice to Pay or Quit (CCP § 1161(2))
Lease Violation (Curable) 3-Day Notice to Cure or Quit (CCP § 1161(3))
Nuisance / Waste 3-Day Unconditional Quit Notice (CCP § 1161(4))
No-Cause (<1 year tenancy) 30-Day Written Notice (Civil Code § 1946)
No-Cause (≥1 year tenancy) 60-Day Written Notice (Civil Code § 1946.1)
AB 1482 Just Cause Required After 12 months — reason must be stated in notice
SB City Rent Control (Eligible Units) Just cause required; verify with SB Rental Housing Mediation Task Force
No-Fault Relocation (AB 1482) 1 month’s rent within 15 days of notice
SCRA Early Termination 30 days notice + qualifying orders — federal law
Security Deposit Cap 1 month’s rent (Civil Code § 1950.5)
Deposit Return Deadline 21 calendar days with itemized statement
Rent Increase Notice 30 days (≤10%); 90 days (>10%)
Court Filing Santa Barbara County Superior Court — 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara County — State Law & Local Highlights

Topic Rule / Notes
Santa Barbara City Rent Stabilization (1979) The City of Santa Barbara enacted a rent control ordinance in 1979, making it one of the older local rent stabilization programs still in effect in California. Eligible units within Santa Barbara city limits — generally residential units built before the ordinance’s base date and not otherwise exempt — are subject to the city’s annual allowable rent increase, separate from AB 1482’s cap. Just cause eviction is required for covered units. Landlords in Santa Barbara city should consult the Santa Barbara Rental Housing Mediation Task Force and confirm whether their specific unit is covered. Units exempt from the city ordinance (newly constructed, SFRs properly noticed, condos, etc.) remain subject to AB 1482 if otherwise eligible. Do not assume AB 1482 is the only layer in Santa Barbara city.
AB 1482 Coverage (County-Wide Outside City RC) Most rental housing in Santa Barbara County outside Santa Barbara city’s covered units built before 2010 is subject to AB 1482’s 5%+CPI rent cap (max 10%) and just-cause eviction requirement after 12 months. The applicable CPI is the BLS CPI-U for the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA. Key exemptions: units built within 15 years, SFRs/condos not owned by corporations/REITs (written exemption notice required), owner-occupied duplexes. AB 1482 expires January 1, 2030.
Vandenberg Space Force Base (SCRA) Vandenberg Space Force Base, located in the northern part of the county between Lompoc and the coast, is one of the largest space launch facilities in the United States and a major military installation with thousands of active-duty personnel. Lompoc and nearby communities have significant military tenant populations from Vandenberg. All active-duty service members at Vandenberg are covered by the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA). Before filing any adverse action against a tenant in Lompoc or the northern county, verify active-duty status at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. SCRA entitles qualifying service members to early lease termination with 30 days’ written notice plus a copy of qualifying military orders. BAH for the Vandenberg duty station is calibrated to the local Lompoc/Santa Maria market, which is lower than the South Coast.
UC Santa Barbara / Isla Vista The University of California Santa Barbara is located adjacent to the unincorporated community of Isla Vista, which is one of the most densely populated square miles in California and one of the most distinctive university rental markets in the state. Isla Vista is home to approximately 15,000–20,000 residents — almost entirely UCSB students — in a compact area of apartment buildings and single-family homes. Rental demand in Isla Vista is essentially guaranteed year-round by UCSB enrollment, though individual units experience high tenant turnover aligned with the academic year. Lease terms aligned with the June–September transition period are standard. Guarantor requirements for undergraduates without independent income are routine. Faculty and graduate student demand spills into adjacent Goleta and the Santa Barbara South Coast.
Wine Country & Agriculture (Santa Ynez Valley / Santa Maria) Santa Barbara County is one of California’s premier wine regions, with the Santa Ynez Valley (including the AVAs of Santa Rita Hills, Happy Canyon, and Sta. Rita Hills) and the Santa Maria Valley producing acclaimed Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Syrah, and other varietals. Wine industry workers — from vineyard laborers to winery staff — are an important tenant segment in Solvang, Santa Ynez, Los Olivos, Buellton, and the surrounding communities. Agricultural income can be seasonal; request annual W-2 or tax return documentation for vineyard workers rather than relying on peak-season pay stubs. The Santa Maria Valley also has significant produce agriculture. Solvang’s Danish Village tourist economy and the wine tourism trade along Highway 246 and the Foxen Canyon wine trail mean hospitality workers with variable income are also common tenants in the valley.
South Coast Tourism Economy Santa Barbara city and the South Coast corridor are significant California tourism destinations — the city’s Spanish colonial architecture, State Street, Stearns Wharf, and the Santa Barbara Zoo draw millions of visitors annually. Hospitality and service industry employment is meaningful, with income that can be seasonally elevated in summer compared to off-season months. Qualify hospitality workers on annual income documentation rather than peak-season snapshots. The South Coast also has a technology and life sciences cluster around Goleta and the UCSB research ecosystem, providing a higher-income tenant segment with more stable W-2 income.
SFR Exemption Notice Requirement Single-family residences and condominiums not owned by a corporation, REIT, or LLC with a corporate member are exempt from AB 1482’s rent cap and just-cause eviction requirements — but only if the landlord has provided the required written exemption notice. This notice must be included in the lease or as a separate written addendum. Failure to provide the notice forfeits the exemption. This is especially relevant on the Santa Barbara South Coast and in the Santa Ynez Valley, where SFR rentals are common.
Security Deposit Cap 1 month’s rent maximum for most landlords (Civil Code § 1950.5; effective July 1, 2024). Small landlords (≤2 properties, ≤4 units) may charge up to 2 months; not applicable to service member tenants. No nonrefundable deposits. Return within 21 days with itemized statement, documentation, and photos.
Habitability & Climate The Santa Barbara South Coast has one of the most temperate climates in the United States — mild year-round, rarely requiring heavy heating or air conditioning. The Santa Ynez Valley and northern county experience more extreme temperatures (hotter summers, cooler winters). Maintain heating for inland properties. For leases entered, amended, or extended on or after January 1, 2026, stove and refrigerator are required habitability elements statewide. Note Civil Code § 1941.8: following a declared disaster or state of emergency (including wildfire), landlords have disaster remediation obligations and price gouging restrictions apply.
DV Early Termination Victims of DV, sexual assault, stalking, human trafficking, elder abuse, or specified violent crimes may terminate with written notice and documentation within 180 days of the qualifying event. Rent obligation ends no more than 14 calendar days after notice (Civil Code § 1946.7).

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for California

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: California
Filing Fee 385-435
Total Est. Range $500-$2,500+
Service: — Writ: —

California State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

3
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
3
Days Notice (Violation)
45-90
Avg Total Days
$385-435
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 3-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit
Notice Period 3 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 20-30 days
Days to Writ 5-15 days
Total Estimated Timeline 45-90 days
Total Estimated Cost $500-$2,500+
⚠️ Watch Out

AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act) requires just cause for evictions of tenants in place 12+ months. 3-day notice can only include rent - no late fees, utilities, or other charges. AB 2347 (eff. Jan 2025/2026) doubled tenant response time from 5 to 10 business days. Notice excludes weekends and court holidays.

Underground Landlord

📝 California Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Superior Court (Unlawful Detainer). Pay the filing fee (~$385-435).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about California eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified California attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Isla Vista / UCSB: One of the densest university rental markets in California. Guarantor requirements for undergraduates without independent income are standard practice. Faculty and graduate students: verify stipend or W-2 source. Align lease terms with the UCSB academic calendar — June–September transitions are the norm. Annual rental demand is essentially guaranteed by enrollment.

Lompoc / Vandenberg SFB (SCRA): Verify active-duty status at scra.dmdc.osd.mil before any adverse action. Plan for SCRA early termination rights as a routine feature of military-adjacent leasing — qualifying service members can exit with 30 days’ notice plus orders. BAH for Vandenberg is calibrated to the Lompoc/Santa Maria market, not South Coast rates.

Santa Barbara city (rent control layer): Confirm whether a specific unit is covered by the 1979 ordinance before setting rents or serving notices. Covered units require just cause and are subject to the city’s annual increase allowance — separate from AB 1482. Contact the Santa Barbara Rental Housing Mediation Task Force to verify coverage.

Wine country / agricultural workers (Santa Ynez & Santa Maria): Use annual W-2 or tax return for income qualification of vineyard and farm workers. Seasonal employment patterns mean monthly pay stubs are unreliable. Bank statements covering 6–12 months add critical context. Many agricultural households have multiple income contributors; document all sources consistently.

South Coast tech / life sciences: Goleta’s UCSB research corridor generates a professional tenant segment with stable W-2 income. Standard qualification criteria apply. The South Coast’s desirability can create competitive application pools — apply consistent screening standards across all applicants.

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Santa Barbara County Landlord-Tenant Law: Three Markets, Two Regulatory Layers, and One of California’s Oldest Rent Ordinances

Santa Barbara County has a reputation that precedes it — the American Riviera, Spanish colonial architecture, celebrity estates on the Mesa, wine country that draws tourists from around the world, a university perched above the Pacific. That reputation is not wrong, exactly, but it describes only one face of a county that is genuinely complex: 120 miles of coastline, an inland agricultural valley that produces world-class wine alongside workaday field crops, a space force base that shapes the northern county’s rental market, and a university community that packs tens of thousands of students into one square mile. For landlords, Santa Barbara County is not one market with one set of rules. It is three distinct sub-regions with different economies, different tenant profiles, and — critically — different legal frameworks governing what you can charge, how you can raise rents, and what grounds justify terminating a tenancy.

The Santa Barbara City Rent Ordinance: California’s Long-Running Local Layer

Most California counties outside of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and a handful of other cities operate under a single rental regulatory framework: AB 1482, the state’s Tenant Protection Act of 2019, with its 5%+CPI rent cap and just-cause eviction requirement for covered units. Santa Barbara County is different because the City of Santa Barbara enacted its own rent stabilization ordinance in 1979 — more than four decades before AB 1482 existed. That ordinance remains in effect for eligible units within the city limits, creating a dual-layer regulatory environment that landlords must navigate carefully.

The city’s ordinance predates Costa-Hawkins (1995), which means it has its own history of coverage determinations, exemptions, and administrative processes that differ from the AB 1482 framework. Generally, units that were built before the ordinance’s applicable base date and that have not otherwise lost coverage are subject to the city’s annual allowable rent increase, which is set by the city (not by the statewide CPI formula) and requires a separate administrative determination each year. Just cause eviction is required for covered units. The Santa Barbara Rental Housing Mediation Task Force administers the program and is the authoritative source for whether a specific unit is covered. Landlords in Santa Barbara city cannot simply assume that AB 1482 is their sole regulatory framework — they must verify the status of each unit individually.

Units in Santa Barbara city that are exempt from the local ordinance — newly constructed properties, properly noticed SFRs and condominiums, owner-occupied duplexes, and others — may still be subject to AB 1482 if they meet the state law’s criteria. The exemption from the city ordinance does not automatically create an exemption from state law. Working through both layers requires careful unit-by-unit analysis, and the consequences of error — an unlawful rent increase or a notice that fails to cite required just-cause grounds — can result in civil liability and invalidated eviction proceedings.

AB 1482 and the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA CPI

Outside Santa Barbara city’s covered units, AB 1482 is the primary framework governing rent increases and just-cause eviction in Santa Barbara County. The applicable CPI for the annual rent cap calculation is the BLS CPI-U for the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura metropolitan statistical area, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics uses as the reference index for this portion of the California coast. This is the index landlords must use when calculating the permissible annual rent increase for covered units in Goleta, Carpinteria, Lompoc, Santa Maria, Solvang, and the unincorporated areas of the county. The cap is 5% plus the applicable CPI percentage, with a maximum of 10% per year in any 12-month period.

AB 1482’s just-cause eviction requirement applies to covered units after a tenant has resided there for 12 months. The law distinguishes between at-fault just cause — nonpayment of rent, lease violations, criminal conduct, nuisance — and no-fault just cause such as owner move-in, substantial renovation requiring vacancy, or withdrawal of the unit from the rental market. No-fault terminations under AB 1482 require payment of one month’s rent as relocation assistance within 15 days of serving the notice. The AB 1482 framework expires on January 1, 2030 unless extended by the legislature. SFRs and condominiums not owned by corporations, REITs, or LLCs with corporate members are exempt from both the rent cap and just-cause requirements, but only if the landlord has provided the required written exemption notice — in the lease or as a separate addendum. Failure to provide that notice forfeits the exemption.

Vandenberg Space Force Base: The Northern County’s Military Anchor

Vandenberg Space Force Base occupies a large stretch of the Santa Barbara County coastline between Point Conception and the city of Lompoc, making it one of the defining geographic and economic features of the county’s northern portion. Vandenberg is the primary West Coast launch facility for the United States Space Force and the Department of Defense, supporting launches for military satellites, national security payloads, and commercial launch customers. The base employs thousands of active-duty Space Force and other military branch personnel, civilian federal employees, and defense contractor workers.

For landlords in Lompoc — the city immediately adjacent to Vandenberg’s main gates — and in the broader northern county, the military tenant population is significant. Active-duty service members at Vandenberg are covered by the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act. SCRA protections include the right to terminate a lease early with 30 days’ written notice and a copy of qualifying military orders (permanent change of station, deployment of 90 days or more, or release from active duty). A landlord cannot penalize a service member for exercising this right, and cannot require waiver of SCRA protections as a lease condition. Before filing any adverse action against a tenant who may be active-duty — or whose household includes an active-duty member — verify status at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. This search is free, takes seconds, and is the appropriate first step any time a Lompoc-area landlord is considering a three-day notice, unlawful detainer filing, or any action that would affect a potentially covered tenant.

BAH for the Vandenberg duty station is calibrated to the Lompoc and Santa Maria rental market, not to the significantly higher rents of the Santa Barbara South Coast. Military tenants in the northern county generally receive BAH that covers local market rents, which are considerably lower than what the same grade-and-dependent-status BAH would represent in Santa Barbara city or Goleta. Northern county landlords benefit from a reliable military tenant population with steady income and federal housing allowances, at rent levels that reflect the local market rather than the premium South Coast.

Isla Vista and UCSB: Density, Turnover, and the University Rental Market

The community of Isla Vista, which sits at the western edge of Goleta and immediately adjacent to the UC Santa Barbara campus, is one of the most distinctive rental environments in California. Occupying roughly one square mile, Isla Vista is home to an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 residents — nearly all of them UCSB students — in a mixture of apartment buildings, townhomes, and single-family houses converted to multi-tenant occupancy. The density is extraordinary for a coastal California community of this character, and the rental market reflects it: demand is essentially perpetual, driven by consistent UCSB enrollment, but turnover is extremely high as students graduate, transfer, or change living arrangements each academic year.

Leases in Isla Vista and the adjacent UCSB-serving neighborhoods of Goleta tend to follow the academic calendar. The critical transition period is late spring to early summer — typically June through September — when one tenant cohort departs and another arrives. Landlords who manage their lease renewal and re-leasing calendar around this transition typically maintain high occupancy. Screening for undergraduate tenants without independent income requires co-signers or guarantors whose income and creditworthiness meet standard qualification criteria; applying this requirement consistently across all undergraduate applicants is both legally appropriate and financially necessary. Graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and faculty have more stable income profiles and are often long-term tenants who reduce the high turnover characteristic of the undergraduate market.

Wine Country, Agriculture, and the Santa Ynez Valley

The Santa Ynez Valley, running inland from the Gaviota coast through Buellton, Solvang, Santa Ynez, Los Olivos, and Ballard, is one of California’s most celebrated wine regions. The valley’s unique east-west orientation allows ocean breezes to penetrate deeply from the Pacific, moderating temperatures and producing growing conditions ideal for cool-climate varietals including Pinot Noir and Chardonnay in the western Santa Rita Hills AVA, and warmer-climate Bordeaux and Rhône varietals further east. The 2004 film Sideways brought international attention to the region, accelerating wine tourism that has permanently changed the valley’s economy and real estate market.

For landlords in Solvang, Buellton, Los Olivos, and the surrounding communities, the wine industry creates a distinctive tenant profile. Vineyard workers, cellar hands, tasting room staff, hospitality employees, and winery administrative personnel are all significant tenant segments. Income patterns vary considerably: vineyard labor can be seasonal and distributed across multiple employers in a given year; winery production and tasting room staff typically have more consistent income but with seasonal peaks during harvest (August through October) and tourism shoulder seasons. The correct income documentation approach for vineyard and agricultural workers is annual W-2 or tax return, not monthly pay stubs — the same principle that applies throughout California’s agricultural communities. The Santa Maria Valley in the northern county adds produce agriculture (particularly strawberries and broccoli) to the mix, with farmworker tenant populations similar to those found in the Salinas Valley and the Oxnard Plain.

The legal framework in the Santa Ynez Valley and northern Santa Barbara County is straightforward: no local rent control, AB 1482 with the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA CPI, and California’s standard habitability requirements. SFR rentals in the wine country communities are common, and the written exemption notice requirement for AB 1482-exempt SFRs is particularly relevant here — many valley landlords rent single-family homes to wine industry workers and must include the required notice in their leases to preserve the exemption.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Santa Barbara County landlord-tenant matters are governed by California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071 and the AB 1482 Tenant Protection Act (Civil Code §§ 1946.2 and 1947.12). Units within the City of Santa Barbara may additionally be subject to the city’s 1979 rent stabilization ordinance; verify unit coverage with the Santa Barbara Rental Housing Mediation Task Force. The applicable CPI for AB 1482 calculations county-wide is the BLS CPI-U for the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura metropolitan statistical area. The federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act applies to active-duty service members at Vandenberg Space Force Base; verify status at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. Unlawful detainer actions are filed in Santa Barbara County Superior Court, 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93121. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent (Civil Code § 1950.5; effective July 1, 2024). Deposit return: 21 calendar days. AB 1482 rent cap: 5%+CPI (Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA), max 10%; expires January 1, 2030. Just cause required after 12 months for covered units. Consult a licensed California attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Santa Barbara County landlord-tenant matters are governed by California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071 and AB 1482 (Civil Code §§ 1946.2 & 1947.12). Units within the City of Santa Barbara may also be subject to the city’s 1979 rent stabilization ordinance — verify with the Santa Barbara Rental Housing Mediation Task Force. The applicable CPI for AB 1482 is the BLS CPI-U for the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA. SCRA applies to active-duty service members at Vandenberg Space Force Base — verify at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. Unlawful detainer filed in Santa Barbara County Superior Court, 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93121. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent (effective July 1, 2024). AB 1482 rent cap: 5%+CPI (Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura MSA), max 10%. Just cause required after 12 months. Expires January 1, 2030. Consult a licensed California attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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