Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Source-of-Income Discrimination

Lancaster vs Los Angeles

How do source-of-income discrimination rules compare between Lancaster, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lancaster and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

California Government Code Β§12955 bans housing discrimination based on a tenant's lawful source of income, including Section 8 vouchers and other rental subsidies. LA County Title 8.42 mirrors and extends the protection in unincorporated areas via DCBA.

View full Lancaster rules β†’

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

California Government Code Β§12955 and Los Angeles housing law prohibit landlords from refusing tenants because their rent comes from a Section 8 voucher, SSI, veterans benefits, or other lawful source. The Civil Rights Department and LAHD enforce.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLancasterLos Angeles
State lawCal. Gov. Code Β§12955Cal. Gov. Code Β§12955(a),(o)
County codeLACO Title 8.42-
Voucher protectionSB-329 (effective 2020)-
Income testApply to tenant share onlyTenant share only
EnforcerDCBA + state CRD-
Local code-LAMC Β§49.97
Enforced by-CRD and LAHD
Effective statewide-January 1, 2020 (SB-329)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lancaster FAQ

Can a landlord refuse Section 8 by saying "no vouchers"?

No. Both state law and LA County Title 8.42 prohibit refusing rental, advertising "no Section 8," or applying different terms because of lawful subsidy income. Doing so triggers a discrimination complaint.

How is income screening allowed to work?

Landlords applying a multiple-of-rent income standard must measure the tenant's share, not the full rent. Standard credit, criminal-history, and reference screens remain permitted within fair-housing limits.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can a landlord still require 2.5x or 3x income?

Yes, but only against the tenant's actual share of rent after the voucher subsidy. Applying the multiplier to total contract rent is treated as a proxy for source-of-income discrimination.

Where do I file a complaint?

File with the California Civil Rights Department within one year, or with LAHD for the Los Angeles local claim. Both routes can run in parallel and reach private damages and civil penalties.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool