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California rental law

19 articles · last reviewed June 2026

Security deposits

Evictions & notices

Eviction notices and the legal process

Eviction in California is a court process called 'unlawful detainer.' It starts with a written notice (commonly a 3-day notice to pay rent or quit, or to cure a lease violation), then a court case. A landlord can never force a tenant out without a court order.

Cal. Code of Civil Procedure §§ 1161, 1170 et seq.
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Illegal 'self-help' evictions and lockouts

It is illegal for a landlord to lock you out, change the locks, remove your belongings, shut off utilities (water, power, gas), or otherwise force you out without a court order. You can recover damages if they do.

Cal. Civil Code § 789.3
tenant
Just cause for eviction (AB 1482)

For covered units, once a tenant has lived there 12+ months the landlord needs a legally recognized 'just cause' to end the tenancy — either 'at-fault' (e.g., nonpayment, lease violation) or 'no-fault' (e.g., owner move-in, withdrawal from rental market).

Cal. Civil Code § 1946.2 (AB 1482)
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Notice periods to end a tenancy

To end a month-to-month tenancy: 30 days' notice if the tenant has lived there less than a year, and 60 days' notice if a year or more. Just-cause rules (AB 1482) may also require a reason and relocation help.

Cal. Civil Code § 1946.1
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Relocation assistance for no-fault evictions

When a landlord ends a covered tenancy for a 'no-fault' reason (like owner move-in or taking the unit off the market), they must give the tenant relocation help equal to one month's rent — usually a direct payment or a waiver of the final month's rent.

Cal. Civil Code § 1946.2(d)
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