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California Landlord-Tenant Laws 2026

Rent control, security deposits, habitability, and tenant protections in San Diego rentals

By John Quigley · Updated May 27, 2026

San Diego Renter: Under AB 1482, annual rent increases for covered units are capped at 5% + CPI (max 10%). San Diego renters in units over 15 years old may be covered. Security deposit refund deadline: 21 days after moving out.

California Rent Control — AB 1482

California's Tenant Protection Act (Civil Code §1947.12) limits annual rent increases for covered units to 5% + local CPI inflation rate, with a maximum of 10% per year. Units covered include:

Units exempt from AB 1482: single-family homes owned by individuals (unless ADUs), condos sold to the tenant, motels, hotels, dormitories, newer units (built within last 15 years).

Security Deposits in California

RuleDetailsLegal Basis
Maximum deposit2 months rent (unfurnished), 3 months (furnished)Civil Code §1950.5(c)
Refund deadline21 days after tenant moves outCivil Code §1950.5(g)
Itemized statementRequired with deductions, receipts for repairsCivil Code §1950.5(g)
Normal wear and tearCannot be deducted from depositCivil Code §1950.5(b)
Penalty for wrongful withholdingUp to 2x deposit as punitive damagesCivil Code §1950.5(l)

Landlord's Duty to Maintain Habitable Conditions

Under Civil Code §1941.1, California landlords must maintain all rental units in habitable condition. Required conditions include:

Tenant Remedies for Uninhabitable Conditions

  1. Written notice — Notify landlord in writing of the condition
  2. Repair and deduct — If landlord fails to repair within reasonable time, tenant may hire a contractor and deduct up to 1 month's rent from rent (Civil Code §1942). Limited to twice per 12 months.
  3. Rent withholding — Withhold rent into an escrow account pending repairs (risky without legal advice)
  4. Code Enforcement — File complaint with San Diego Code Enforcement (619-533-4444)
  5. Lawsuit — Sue for breach of warranty of habitability, recover damages including rent paid during uninhabitable period

Notice Requirements Before Rent Increase

Landlords must provide written notice before any rent increase:

San Diego County COVID-19 Tenant Protections

San Diego's COVID-era eviction protections have largely expired. Tenants who accumulated COVID-related rental debt should check the current status of any remaining local protections and consult with a San Diego tenant rights attorney about their specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can my San Diego landlord raise my rent as much as they want?
If your unit is covered by AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act), annual rent increases are capped at 5% + local CPI, with a maximum of 10%. San Diego's CPI is typically 3–5%, making the effective cap 8–10% annually. If your unit is exempt (single-family home owned by an individual, newer construction, etc.) or subject to stricter local rent control, different rules apply. Rent increases above the cap are void and unenforceable. A San Diego tenant rights attorney can advise on whether your unit is covered.
What can my San Diego landlord legally deduct from my security deposit?
Lawful deductions include: unpaid rent, cleaning costs if the unit is left in an unusually dirty condition, damage beyond normal wear and tear, and costs to restore the unit to its prior condition. 'Normal wear and tear' — scuffs on walls, minor carpet wear, small nail holes — cannot be deducted. Landlords must provide itemized receipts within 21 days. If deductions are unjustified, you can sue in San Diego Small Claims Court for the deposit plus up to double the deposit amount as punitive damages if the withholding was in bad faith.
My San Diego landlord entered my apartment without notice — is that legal?
No, generally. California Civil Code §1954 requires landlords to give at least 24 hours advance written notice before entering a rental unit — except in emergencies (fire, flood, gas leak, etc.). Permissible entry reasons include: repairs, inspections, to show the unit to prospective tenants/buyers, emergency services. Landlords who repeatedly enter without notice may be liable for harassment or breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment. Keep records of unauthorized entries — this can be a basis for terminating your lease or a lawsuit.
Can I break my San Diego lease early without penalty?
California law allows tenants to break a lease without penalty in limited circumstances: the unit is uninhabitable (Civil Code §1941), the landlord violated your privacy or harassed you, you are a domestic violence victim (Civil Code §1946.7), you are an active-duty military member being deployed (Service Members Civil Relief Act), or you are a victim of certain crimes under Civil Code §1946.7. In other cases, you may owe remaining rent until the landlord re-rents the unit (California requires landlords to mitigate damages by re-renting). A San Diego tenant attorney can advise on your exit options.

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