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πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Rent Control

Rent Control: Concord vs Oakley

How do rent control rules compare between Concord, CA and Oakley, CA?

Concord and Oakley have similar restriction levels.

Concord, CA

Contra Costa County

Some Restrictions

Civil Code 1947.12 limits annual rent increases to 5 percent plus CPI, capped at 10 percent total, on most California rental units regardless of local ordinances.

View full Concord rules β†’

Oakley, CA

Contra Costa County

Some Restrictions

Oakley does not have a local rent control ordinance. California's AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act of 2019) provides statewide rent caps for most multi-family buildings 15+ years old: annual increases capped at 5% plus local CPI (max 10%). Single-family homes and condos may be exempt if the owner provides the required written exemption notice.

View full Oakley rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactConcordOakley
StatuteCivil Code 1947.12-
Cap5% + CPI, max 10%-
PreemptionCosta-Hawkins 1954.50-
SunsetUntil 2030-
Local Rent Control-None β€” Oakley has no local rent control
State Cap (AB 1482)-5% + local CPI, max 10% annually
Buildings Covered-Multi-family 15+ years old
Exemptions-SFH and condos may be exempt with written notice

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Concord FAQ

Does AB-1482 cover single-family rentals?

Generally no, if the owner is an individual (not a corporation or LLC) and provides written notice of exemption. Corporate-owned single-family homes are covered.

Can my city impose stricter rent caps?

Only on units not exempted by Costa-Hawkins. Single-family homes, condos, and post-1995 construction generally cannot be subject to local rent control.

Oakley FAQ

Is there rent control in Oakley?

Local rent control measures may apply. Check with Oakley housing department for covered units, allowable increases, and tenant rights.

How much notice is required before a rent increase?

Typically 30 days for month-to-month tenancies and at lease renewal for fixed-term leases. Some states require 60 to 90 days for larger increases. Check state landlord-tenant law for specifics.

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