Mold & Toxic Exposure

A Toxic Home Can Make You Sick. That’s on the Landlord.

Toxic mold, lead paint, asbestos, carbon monoxide, and harsh chemicals don’t just damage a rental — they damage your health. In California, a landlord who lets these hazards fester, or paints over the problem instead of fixing it, can be held responsible for the harm. You may be owed far more than you think.

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The Basics

It’s Not About the Color of the Mold.

People worry about “toxic black mold,” but California law doesn’t turn on the species or color. What matters is moisture and visible growth. The California Department of Public Health is clear: water damage, damp materials, and visible mold of any color signal a health risk that needs to be fixed.

That’s why a common landlord defense fails. There is no legal “safe” spore count in California — the state never set one. A landlord can’t wave away your complaint by claiming an air test “passed.” Under the state housing code, visible mold that’s more than superficial is a substandard condition on its own.

The same goes for the underlying cause. Spraying bleach and painting over mold without fixing the leak that feeds it isn’t a repair — it’s a cover-up, and the landlord stays on the hook when it comes back.

Know the Dangers

Common Toxic Exposures in a Rental

Each of these has its own health risks — and its own legal duties that California places on your landlord.

Toxic Mold & Moisture

Roof and pipe leaks, sewage backups, and poor ventilation feed mold that can trigger asthma, infections, and allergic reactions. Visible growth is a code violation in California.

Lead-Based Paint

In pre-1978 buildings, lead dust from old windows or unsafe scraping is dangerous — especially to children, causing irreversible developmental harm. Landlords must disclose it.

Asbestos

Common in pre-1979 tile, insulation, and “popcorn” ceilings. Once disturbed by decay or careless renovation, the fibers cause catastrophic lung disease decades later.

Carbon Monoxide

A silent, odorless killer from faulty heaters, water heaters, or attached garages. California requires working CO alarms — a missing or dead one is a serious hazard.

Pesticides & Chemicals

Unlicensed landlords spraying commercial pesticides, or cheap “flip” materials off-gassing fumes, can cause real respiratory and neurological symptoms. Notice is required.

Contaminated Water

Degraded, antiquated plumbing — like corroding galvanized pipes — can leach metals into your tap water, a clear violation of the basic right to safe, sanitary water.

If You’ve Been Exposed

Protect Your Health & Your Case.

Toxic exposure cases are won with evidence. The steps you take now — before things get cleaned up or covered over — can make or break your claim.

Some “self-help” remedies exist, but they’re strictly limited and risky. When health is on the line, talk to us first.

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  1. 01

    Document everything — now

    Photograph and video the mold, water stains, peeling paint, or damage. Save anything that proves it, and keep a dated log of your symptoms and doctor visits.

  2. 02

    Report it in writing

    Email or text your landlord describing the hazard and your health concerns. A clear, dated paper trail showing they knew is critical evidence.

  3. 03

    Call code enforcement or public health

    An inspector’s citation is objective, gold-standard proof — it neutralizes the “the unit is fine” defense and can unlock strong protections under Civil Code §1942.4.

  4. 04

    See a doctor — and keep records

    Get checked early. Medical records that connect your symptoms to the timeline of the exposure are the backbone of any personal-injury claim.

  5. 05

    Talk to us before withholding rent

    “Repair and deduct” and rent withholding exist, but a misstep can get you evicted — and they rarely cover the cost of testing. Get legal advice first.

Why It’s Worth Fighting

What a Toxic-Exposure Claim Can Be Worth.

These cases often combine a habitability claim with a personal-injury claim — which can stack multiple kinds of recovery. Depending on the facts, that may include:

Rent Abatement

A refund for the time you paid full rent on a home compromised by toxic conditions — the gap between what you paid and what the unit was actually worth.

Medical & Injury Damages

Compensation for past and future medical bills, ongoing monitoring (vital in lead and asbestos cases), treatment, and the physical pain of toxic exposure.

Property Damage

The replacement value of furniture, clothing, mattresses, and belongings ruined by water, embedded mold spores, or toxic dust.

Relocation Costs

When remediation forces you out, the landlord often must cover temporary housing, hotels, or a daily allowance — many cities require specific relocation payments.

Emotional Distress

Compensation for the fear, anxiety, and indignity of living in a toxic home — and in some cities, those distress damages can be multiplied.

Penalties & Fees

When a landlord ignores an official inspection for 35 days, Civil Code §1942.4 allows penalties of $100 to $5,000 — and the law shifts your attorney’s fees onto them.

Do Any of These Apply?

Warning Signs of a Toxic Home

  • A persistent musty, damp, or chemical odor
  • Visible mold, even after it’s been painted over before
  • Water stains, bubbling paint, or warped walls and ceilings
  • Recurring coughing, wheezing, headaches, or rashes at home
  • Symptoms that ease when you’re away and return when home
  • Peeling or chipping paint in a building built before 1978
  • A leak or roof problem the landlord keeps “patching”
  • No working carbon monoxide alarm near gas appliances
Common Questions

Toxic Exposure, Answered.

No. California never adopted a numerical limit for mold spores, because health agencies concluded people react too differently for a single number to be meaningful. You don’t need a spore count to be protected — under the state housing code, visible mold that’s more than superficial is treated as a substandard condition the landlord must fix.

No — not as a real fix. Public-health guidance is clear that simply bleaching or painting over mold is not proper remediation. The landlord has to physically remove the moldy material and fix the underlying moisture source — the leak, condensation, or ventilation problem — that caused it. A cover-up that lets the mold return leaves the landlord fully responsible.

Often, yes. If a toxic condition caused a health problem — asthma, a respiratory infection, lead harm to a child — you may have a personal-injury claim on top of your habitability claim. These cases turn on connecting the exposure to your illness, which usually means medical records and sometimes expert testimony, so it’s worth getting an attorney involved early.

No. Those clauses are void in California. A landlord cannot use a lease to sign away their duty to provide a safe, habitable home or to escape responsibility for hazards like mold, lead, or asbestos. You keep your full legal rights no matter what that clause says.

Yes. For buildings built before 1978, federal and state law require the landlord to disclose known lead-based paint and give you an EPA information pamphlet before you sign. For buildings built before 1979, California requires written notice to tenants if the landlord knows asbestos-containing materials are present.

Don’t wait — California sets strict deadlines, and they can be short. Personal-injury claims in particular run on a tight clock that often starts when you discover the harm and its link to the home. Because missing a deadline can permanently end your right to recover, talk to an attorney as soon as you suspect your home is making you sick.

Is your home making you sick? Let’s talk.