California Civil Code § 1954 limits when a landlord may enter a rented home. Except in emergencies, abandonment, or with tenant consent, the landlord must give reasonable written notice (24 hours is presumed reasonable) and may enter only during normal business hours, for specific permitted reasons such as repairs, inspections, or showings.
Civil Code § 1954 lets a landlord enter only to address an emergency, make "necessary or agreed repairs, decorations, alterations or improvements," supply agreed services, show the unit to prospective tenants or buyers, conduct a move-out inspection, or under court order or after abandonment. Except for emergencies or consent at the time of entry, "the landlord shall give the tenant reasonable notice in writing of his or her intent to enter and enter only during normal business hours." Personally delivered or posted notice 24 hours before entry is presumed reasonable; mailed notice is presumed reasonable if sent at least six days prior. The notice must state "the date, approximate time, and purpose of the entry."
A landlord who enters without proper notice or for an improper purpose may be liable for invasion of privacy, trespass, or breach of quiet enjoyment. Repeated entries used to harass a tenant can support damages and statutory penalties.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Nevada County, CA
In snow areas of unincorporated Nevada County it is unlawful to leave a vehicle in the county road right-of-way during snow-removal operations. Residents mus...
Nevada County, CA
Unincorporated Nevada County's rural roads largely lack painted curbs, so loading-zone rules follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458 curb-color meanings...
Nevada County, CA
Nevada County has no county-specific electric-vehicle-charging parking ordinance for unincorporated areas; designated EV charging spaces are governed by Cali...
Nevada County, CA
Oversized vehicles such as motorhomes, large trailers, and heavy trucks in unincorporated Nevada County are governed by California Vehicle Code parking rules...
Grass Valley, CA
Grass Valley's parking rules are in Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) of the Municipal Code — Chapter 10.32 (Stopping, Standing and Parking) and Chapter 10.48 ...
Nevada County, CA
Nevada County allows a wide range of fence materials. Sec. 12.04.106 expressly recognizes wood, metal, wire, fabric, boards, and masonry walls, classifying e...
See how Grass Valley's landlord entry & notice rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.