Just cause eviction rules in Santa Cruz County, CA — sometimes called tenant protection or "for cause" eviction ordinances — list the specific legal reasons a landlord can end a tenancy.
Unincorporated Santa Cruz County has no local just-cause eviction ordinance; California's statewide Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (AB 1482, Civ Code 1946.2) applies. AB 1482 requires 'just cause' to terminate tenancies of 12+ months and caps annual rent increases at 5% + CPI (max 10%) for most rentals more than 15 years old.
Unincorporated Santa Cruz County does not have a local just-cause-for-eviction ordinance distinct from state law; the City of Santa Cruz also lacks its own permanent just-cause ordinance after the 2018 Measure M (Rent Control & Tenant Protections) was rejected by voters and the City's 2019 emergency just-cause ordinance expired 12/31/2019. The applicable framework is therefore the California Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (AB 1482, codified at Cal. Civ Code 1946.2 and 1947.12), effective 1/1/2020. AB 1482 covers most residential rentals more than 15 years old (rolling exemption) and requires landlords to state 'just cause' - at-fault (nonpayment, breach, nuisance, criminal activity, refusal to renew, etc.) or no-fault (owner/family move-in, substantial remodel, withdrawal from market under Ellis Act, government order) - to terminate any tenancy of 12 months or more. No-fault terminations require one month's rent in relocation assistance or a one-month rent waiver. AB 1482 also caps annual rent increases at 5% plus the regional CPI, with a 10% absolute maximum. Exempted are single-family homes owned by non-corporate landlords (with proper notice), condos similarly owned, new construction under 15 years, owner-occupied duplexes, and deed-restricted affordable housing. AB 1482 Disclosure (Civ Code 1946.2(e)) must be in every lease.
Wrongful eviction violations under AB 1482 expose landlords to tenant suits for actual damages, treble damages for willful violations, and attorneys' fees under Civ Code 1946.2(h). Failure to provide the AB 1482 written notice is a defense to eviction. Local Code Compliance does not enforce AB 1482; tenants must sue civilly or seek help from organizations like the Santa Cruz County Conflict Resolution Center.
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