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πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Just Cause Eviction

Just Cause Eviction: Burbank vs Santa Clarita

How do just cause eviction rules compare between Burbank, CA and Santa Clarita, CA?

Burbank and Santa Clarita have similar restriction levels.

Burbank, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Burbank adopted a Tenant Protection Ordinance (No. 24-4,014) effective August 31, 2024. Requires just cause for evictions per CA Civil Code 1946.2. No-fault evictions require relocation assistance of 3 months rent (exceeding state minimum of 1 month). Anti-retaliation and anti-harassment protections added in 2025.

View full Burbank rules β†’

Santa Clarita, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

No local just-cause eviction ordinance. California AB 1482 provides statewide just-cause eviction protections for qualifying tenants (12+ months tenancy).

View full Santa Clarita rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBurbankSanta Clarita
OrdinanceNo. 24-4,014 (eff. 8/31/2024)-
Relocation3 months rent for no-fault evictionRequired for no-fault eviction
State Minimum1 month (Burbank exceeds)-
Anti-HarassmentAdded March 2025-
Contact(818) 238-5180-
Local Ordinance-None
State Law-AB 1482 applies
Qualifying-12+ months tenancy

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Burbank FAQ

Can my landlord evict me without a reason?

In units covered by just cause protections, no. Landlords must have a valid reason. Check if your unit is covered under Burbank or state just cause requirements.

What is a self-help eviction?

When a landlord tries to force a tenant out by changing locks, removing doors, shutting off utilities, or removing belongings. This is illegal everywhere and tenants can sue for damages.

Santa Clarita FAQ

Can my landlord evict me without a reason?

In units covered by just cause protections, no. Landlords must have a valid reason. Check if your unit is covered under Santa Clarita or state just cause requirements.

What is a self-help eviction?

When a landlord tries to force a tenant out by changing locks, removing doors, shutting off utilities, or removing belongings. This is illegal everywhere and tenants can sue for damages.

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