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Sonoma County California
Sonoma County · California

Sonoma County Landlord-Tenant Law

Wine country, wildfire recovery, and the North Bay’s largest county — Santa Rosa’s local tenant protections, AB 1482 across most of the county, and a rental market reshaped by the 2017 Tubbs and 2019 Kincade fires

📍 County Seat: Santa Rosa — Sonoma County Superior Court
👥 ~490K residents — California’s 17th most populous county
⚖️ Superior Court • 600 Administration Dr, Santa Rosa, CA 95403
🍷 Santa Rosa tenant protections • AB 1482 broadly applies • Wildfire risk & habitability obligations

Sonoma County Rental Market Overview

Sonoma County is California’s most celebrated wine region and the largest county in the North Bay, stretching from the Pacific Coast at Bodega Bay and Jenner eastward through the Russian River wine country, the Sonoma Valley, and the Alexander Valley to the Mayacamas Mountains. With roughly 490,000 residents anchored by Santa Rosa — the county seat and a city of over 175,000 — along with Petaluma, Rohnert Park, Sebastopol, Healdsburg, Windsor, and Sonoma, the county has a diverse economic base built on wine and agriculture, tourism, healthcare, and a growing population of Bay Area remote workers who have discovered that Sonoma County quality of life is extraordinary relative to what Bay Area housing costs would otherwise require.

For landlords, Sonoma County requires attention on two distinct fronts. First, the legal framework: the City of Santa Rosa has enacted local tenant protection measures that layer on top of AB 1482 for properties within city limits, and the county as a whole is governed by AB 1482 for eligible pre-2010 rental housing. Second, and uniquely among California counties, wildfire: Sonoma County has experienced some of the most destructive wildfires in California history — the 2017 Tubbs Fire destroyed over 5,600 structures primarily in Santa Rosa, and the 2019 Kincade Fire burned over 77,000 acres in the northern county — creating ongoing habitability obligations, insurance considerations, and disclosure requirements that landlords in wildfire-adjacent areas must understand and address proactively.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat City of Santa Rosa
Major Cities Santa Rosa, Petaluma, Rohnert Park, Windsor, Sebastopol, Healdsburg, Sonoma, Cotati
Population ~490K — California’s 17th most populous county
Top Employers Wine industry (Kendall-Jackson, E&J Gallo North, Jackson Family Wines), healthcare (Sutter, Kaiser), Sonoma State, tourism
Median Rent ~$2,000–$2,700/mo (1BR); Healdsburg, Sonoma, and Petaluma higher
Santa Rosa Tenant Protections Local just cause & relocation rules within city limits — verify before action
County-Wide Rent Control None — AB 1482 governs outside Santa Rosa
AB 1482 Cap 5% + CPI (Santa Rosa MSA), max 10%/yr
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
Santa Rosa Local Protections Additional just cause & relocation for city units — verify
No-Fault Relocation (AB 1482) 1 month’s rent within 15 days of notice
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 Sonoma County Superior Court — 600 Administration Dr, Santa Rosa

Sonoma County — State Law & Local Highlights

Topic Rule / Notes
AB 1482 Coverage Most Sonoma County rental housing 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 Santa Rosa metropolitan statistical area. Key exemptions: units built within the last 15 years, SFRs/condos not owned by corporations/REITs (written exemption notice required), owner-occupied duplexes. Expires January 1, 2030.
City of Santa Rosa Tenant Protections The City of Santa Rosa enacted tenant protection ordinances that layer on top of AB 1482 for properties within city limits. Local just cause eviction requirements and relocation assistance obligations may exceed AB 1482 minimums for covered units in Santa Rosa. Always verify current City of Santa Rosa ordinance requirements before serving any termination notice or taking adverse action on a covered city property. The city’s tenant protection framework was significantly strengthened in the years following the 2017 Tubbs Fire displacement crisis.
Wildfire Disclosure & Habitability Sonoma County has experienced catastrophic wildfires: the 2017 Tubbs Fire (5,600+ structures destroyed, primarily in Santa Rosa), the 2017 Nuns Fire, and the 2019 Kincade Fire (77,000+ acres in northern county). California Civil Code § 1941.8 (effective January 1, 2026) requires landlords to remediate disaster-related dilapidations including smoke, ash, and debris within a reasonable time following government protocols, and discharges tenant rent obligations during mandatory evacuation orders under a declared disaster. Verify current wildfire risk classification for your specific property. Maintain adequate property insurance; some insurers have withdrawn from high-risk Sonoma County areas, making coverage verification a material due diligence step.
Wine Industry & Hospitality Economy Sonoma County is home to hundreds of wineries and vineyards, anchored by major producers including Jackson Family Wines (Kendall-Jackson), E&J Gallo’s northern operations, Jordan Winery, and dozens of boutique labels. Wine industry employment includes year-round positions (winemaking, marketing, administration) and seasonal work (harvest, vineyard labor). Tourism employment at hotels, restaurants, and tasting rooms is significant but seasonally variable. For hospitality and harvest workers, use annual tax returns rather than peak-season pay stubs for income qualification.
Petaluma & Bay Area Commuter Market Petaluma has emerged as one of the Bay Area’s northern commuter communities, accessible to Marin County and San Francisco via Highway 101. Many Petaluma tenants work in the Bay Area and commute south; some use the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit (SMART) train that connects Petaluma and Santa Rosa to Marin. These tenants have Bay Area incomes at North Bay rents, producing excellent income-to-rent ratios. Remote work has further strengthened this dynamic.
Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park) Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park enrolls roughly 8,000 students and generates rental demand in Rohnert Park and surrounding communities. Rohnert Park has one of the county’s larger apartment inventories and generally lower rents than Santa Rosa or Petaluma. Student tenant screening: require guarantors for undergraduates without independent income. SSU’s graduate programs produce more reliable income profiles.
Coastal & Rural Communities Bodega Bay, Jenner, Guerneville, and the Russian River corridor have small rental markets with high STR demand. Short-term vacation rental regulation varies by jurisdiction; verify local permit requirements before marketing any property short-term. Rural Sonoma County properties on wells and septic require regular maintenance; document utility infrastructure in the lease. Coastal and river community tenants often include hospitality and outdoor recreation workers with seasonally variable income.
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.
Insurance Availability Multiple major insurers have reduced or withdrawn from Sonoma County due to wildfire risk. Verify current insurance coverage for all properties, particularly those in high-risk zones. The California FAIR Plan (insurer of last resort) may be the only option for some properties. Factor insurance costs into financial analysis for any Sonoma County rental property. Under Civil Code § 1941.8, landlords must carry adequate insurance to remediate disaster-related dilapidations.
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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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: California landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in California — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need California's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Santa Rosa (city limits): Verify Santa Rosa tenant protection ordinance requirements before any termination notice or rent increase above AB 1482. City ordinance may impose additional requirements beyond state law. Healthcare workers (Sutter Santa Rosa, Kaiser) and county government employees are the most stable tenant profiles here. AB 1482 exemption notice essential for qualifying SFR rentals.

Petaluma (Bay Area commuter): Bay Area income profiles at North Bay rents. SMART train access to Marin for SF commuters. No local rent control; AB 1482 only. Excellent income-to-rent ratios for Bay Area-employed tenants. Remote workers have further strengthened this market; verify current remote work policy when screening.

Wine industry tenants: Distinguish year-round from seasonal employment. Year-round winery employees (winemakers, marketing, admin) have stable W-2 income. Harvest and vineyard workers are seasonal; use annual tax returns. Hospitality workers at wine country hotels and restaurants have seasonally variable income that peaks in summer/fall and drops in winter.

Wildfire disclosure: For properties in FHSZ (Fire Hazard Severity Zones), disclose in the lease and verify current insurance coverage. Under Civil Code § 1941.8, rent obligations are discharged during mandatory evacuation orders. Know your property’s fire risk zone classification before leasing.

Healdsburg & Sonoma (wine country premium): High-income wine industry professional and tourism management tenants. Very low vacancy for well-maintained units. AB 1482 exemption notice critical for the large SFR stock. Longer tenancy durations; screen for income and rental history quality, not just affordability math.

Sonoma County Landlords

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Background checks, eviction history, credit reports — get the full picture before handing over the keys.

Sonoma County Landlord-Tenant Law: Wine Country, Wildfire Recovery, and a North Bay Market Remade by Crisis and Opportunity

Sonoma County has been through more than most California counties in the past decade. The 2017 Tubbs Fire roared through Santa Rosa on the night of October 8th, destroying more than 5,600 structures in a matter of hours in one of the most destructive urban fire events in California history. Nearly 3,000 acres of the city burned in a single night, including entire neighborhoods — Coffey Park, Fountaingrove, Larkfield-Wikiup — that simply ceased to exist by morning. The displacement of thousands of households into an already supply-constrained rental market created a humanitarian crisis that also fundamentally reshaped the county’s housing landscape, accelerated tenant protection legislation, and redefined what it means to be a landlord in Sonoma County. Two years later, the Kincade Fire added another 77,000 acres to the county’s fire history, and the ongoing reality of wildfire risk has permanently altered insurance markets, property values, and habitability obligations throughout the county.

For landlords, understanding Sonoma County begins with acknowledging that wildfire is not a background risk here — it is a foregrounded operational reality that affects insurance availability, habitability obligations, disclosure requirements, and the legal relationship between landlords and tenants during and after disaster events. California Civil Code Section 1941.8, effective January 1, 2026, specifically addresses this: landlords must remediate disaster-related dilapidations including smoke damage, ash, and debris within a reasonable time following applicable government protocols after a declared disaster, and tenants’ rent obligations are discharged for any period during which they are subject to a mandatory evacuation order. For Sonoma County landlords with properties in or near fire hazard severity zones, these are not abstract statutory provisions — they are operational obligations that need to be understood before a fire event, not discovered during one.

The Legal Framework: Santa Rosa, AB 1482, and the Santa Rosa MSA CPI

Sonoma County’s regulatory environment is layered but manageable. The City of Santa Rosa enacted local tenant protection measures in the years following the 2017 fire, strengthening just cause eviction requirements and relocation assistance obligations for properties within city limits. These local measures apply on top of AB 1482 for covered properties in the city. Before serving any termination notice on a Santa Rosa city property, landlords should verify both the AB 1482 requirements and the current city ordinance requirements, as the local rules may impose additional procedural steps or relocation amounts.

Outside the City of Santa Rosa, the rest of the county is governed by AB 1482 without significant local overlays. The CPI used for the AB 1482 rent cap formula is the BLS CPI-U for the Santa Rosa metropolitan statistical area — Sonoma County’s own metro index, distinct from the Bay Area and Sacramento indices. The Santa Rosa MSA CPI has historically been moderate, reflecting the county’s North Bay position between the expensive Bay Area and the more affordable Central Valley. For landlords with properties in both Sonoma and Marin counties, for example, the two properties use different CPI indices even though they are neighboring counties within the broader Bay Area region. Always verify the correct MSA index for each county.

The Tenant Pool: Wine Country Professionals, Bay Area Commuters, and the Remote Work Wave

Sonoma County’s tenant pool has evolved significantly over the past decade. The traditional foundation — wine industry workers, healthcare professionals, government employees, agricultural and hospitality workers — remains, but it has been layered with two significant newer demographics. The first is Bay Area commuters: workers who live in Sonoma County for quality of life and commute south to Marin, San Francisco, or the East Bay. The SMART train connecting Petaluma and Santa Rosa to Marin County has made this commute feasible for many workers, and Highway 101 provides a manageable if peak-hour-challenging drive. These tenants often have Bay Area-level incomes — a software engineer commuting from Petaluma to a Marin tech office might earn $180,000 in a county where one-bedroom apartments rent for $2,200. The income-to-rent ratio is exceptional, and these tenants tend to be stable, financially responsible, and strongly motivated to maintain their housing given what they’d face if they had to return to the Bay Area market.

The second newer demographic is the remote worker. Sonoma County’s quality of life — wine country, coastal access, outstanding food culture, milder climate than most of California — has made it an extremely attractive destination for tech and professional workers who no longer need to be near an office five days a week. Remote workers bring Bay Area incomes to a North Bay market and typically have strong financial profiles. The risk with remote workers is employment volatility tied to company policy changes around in-office requirements; a sudden return-to-office mandate in San Francisco can force a relocation decision that terminates the tenancy. For longer-term leases with remote worker tenants, building a clear understanding of the employer’s office policy into the lease discussion — while not making remote work eligibility a condition of tenancy, which would raise fair housing concerns — is a reasonable step.

The wine industry tenant profile is more complex than it appears. Sonoma County has hundreds of wineries ranging from major producers like Jackson Family Wines to tiny boutique operations with two employees. A winemaker or marketing director at a major winery has stable, professional-level income. A tasting room host at a small boutique winery earns a hospitality wage that peaks dramatically during the September-November harvest season and tourist summer and drops in the winter. A vineyard harvest worker is purely seasonal, earning most of their annual income in a six-to-eight-week window. The screening approach for each of these profiles is completely different, and distinguishing them requires asking specifically about the nature and seasonality of the applicant’s wine industry employment. Annual tax returns or W-2s are the correct documentation tool for anyone with seasonal income variation.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Sonoma County landlord-tenant matters are governed by California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071, the AB 1482 Tenant Protection Act (Civil Code §§ 1946.2 and 1947.12), and City of Santa Rosa local tenant protection ordinances for properties within city limits. The applicable CPI for AB 1482 calculations is the BLS CPI-U for the Santa Rosa metropolitan statistical area. Civil Code § 1941.8 imposes landlord obligations regarding disaster-related habitability and remediation. Unlawful detainer actions are filed in Sonoma County Superior Court, 600 Administration Dr, Santa Rosa, CA 95403. 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, max 10%; expires January 1, 2030. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your property and tenancy. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Sonoma County landlord-tenant matters are governed by California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071, AB 1482 (Civil Code §§ 1946.2 & 1947.12), and City of Santa Rosa local ordinances for city properties. The applicable CPI for AB 1482 is the BLS CPI-U for the Santa Rosa MSA. Civil Code § 1941.8 imposes disaster remediation obligations. Unlawful detainer actions filed in Sonoma County Superior Court, 600 Administration Dr, Santa Rosa, CA 95403. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent (effective July 1, 2024). AB 1482 rent cap: 5%+CPI, max 10%. Just cause required after 12 months. Expires January 1, 2030. Verify Santa Rosa city ordinance before any action on covered units. Consult a licensed California attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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