Answer a few questions about your rental property to find out if California's Tenant Protection Act applies to you. Free, no sign-up required.
Built by a landlord, for landlords
I missed a deposit interest deadline in South Pasadena and had to scramble to figure out what I owed — and whether I was already in violation. The rules were buried across ordinance PDFs and city websites. I built DueNotice so no landlord has to go through that again.
California's rental regulations are a patchwork of state and local laws. LA's RSO, Pasadena's Measure H, Santa Monica's Rent Control Charter Amendment, and South Pasadena's AB 1482 protections each have different rules. Property type, year built, and owner occupancy all affect what applies to you. We handle the complexity so you don't have to.
Measure H rent stabilization, rental registry, deposit interest — all tracked automatically.
Rent Control Charter Amendment — strict rent caps, $198/unit registration, relocation assistance, and Ellis Act requirements.
AB 1482 tenant protections plus stricter local just-cause eviction rules under Ordinance No. 2384.
Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) coverage — rent caps, LAHD registration, just cause eviction, and relocation assistance.
“I nearly sent a rent increase notice to my tenant in South Pasadena without realizing the city had just passed a local just-cause eviction ordinance with stricter rules than state law. Ordinance No. 2384 removed ‘substantial remodel’ as a valid reason to evict — something AB 1482 still allows. I found out months later, by accident. That's when I realized: every city has its own layer of rules on top of California law, and keeping track of all of them manually is how landlords end up making expensive mistakes.”
— Founder, DueNotice
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