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🔑 Rental Property Rules/Rent Control

Rent Control: Riverside vs Temecula

How do rent control rules compare between Riverside, CA and Temecula, CA?

Riverside and Temecula have similar restriction levels.

Riverside, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

California's Tenant Protection Act (AB 1482) applies to most rental properties in Riverside built more than 15 years ago. The law caps annual rent increases at 5% plus the local CPI or 10%, whichever is less. Riverside does not have a separate local rent control ordinance. Exempt properties include qualifying single-family homes, new construction less than 15 years old, and certain owner-occupied duplexes.

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Temecula, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Temecula has no local rent control ordinance. Most rental properties are subject only to California's statewide rent cap under AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act of 2019), which limits annual rent increases to 5% plus regional CPI, capped at 10%. Single-family homes (not corporate-owned), new construction under 15 years old, and owner-occupied duplexes are exempt from AB 1482.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactRiversideTemecula
State LawAB 1482 — Tenant Protection Act-
Rent Cap5% + CPI or 10%, whichever is less-
Local OrdinanceNo separate local rent control-
ExemptionsSingle-family homes (with notice), new construction-
NoticeLandlords must provide AB 1482 notice-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Riverside FAQ

Does Riverside have rent control?

There is no local rent control ordinance, but California's AB 1482 caps annual rent increases at 5% plus CPI (or 10% max) for most rentals built more than 15 years ago.

Is my Riverside rental covered by AB 1482?

Most multi-family rentals and older properties are covered. Exemptions include qualifying single-family homes with proper notice, new construction under 15 years old, and certain owner-occupied duplexes.

Temecula FAQ

How much can my landlord raise my rent?

Under AB 1482, the lower of 5% + regional CPI or 10%. For Riverside County 2024-25, about 8.6%. Single-family homes individually owned with proper notice are exempt and have no cap.

Does AB 1482 apply to my single-family rental?

Only if the owner is a corporation or REIT, OR the lease lacks the required exemption notice. Individually-owned SFH and condos with the proper notice are exempt and have no rent cap.

What if my landlord raises rent above the cap?

Document the violation and notify the landlord in writing of AB 1482. If they refuse to correct it, you may sue in small claims court or contact Inland Counties Legal Services for help.

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