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Landlords must also give tenants sufficient warning before increasing rent. If the rent increase is less than 10%, landlords must provide notice 30 days before the increase can take effect. If the rent increase is more than 10%, the landlord must provide notice 90 days before it can take effect.
AB 1482 is an important California law with the following highlights: It requires a landlord to establish just cause to be able to terminate a tenancy. It sets the limit to annual rent increases to no more than 5 percent plus the local consumer price index or CPI (inflation rate), or 10 percent (whichever is lower).
The law's tenant protections apply to both month-to-month rentals as well as fixed leases. For any tenant who has continuously and lawfully resided in a property for 12 months, the landlord must have ?just cause? as provided in AB 1482 to terminate the tenancy.
Mailed notice. Owners must, however, add five days to the notice if the noticed is served by mail; (for example 35 days if the increase is 10 percent or less and 65 days if the increase is more than 10 percent). The copy of the notice must include a notation of the date and place of mailing.
In addition to limiting rent increases, AB 1482 prevents evictions without just cause for tenants that have lived in the unit for at least one year. ?Just cause? for eviction includes failure to pay rent, criminal activity, or breach of a material term of the lease.