Retaliatory Eviction
An eviction notice that lands soon after you complained about conditions or asserted a legal right — including pretextual “no-fault” or “remodel” notices.
In California, a landlord cannot evict you, raise your rent, or cut your services to punish you for requesting repairs, reporting code violations, or organizing with other tenants. If a landlord turned on you after you asserted your rights, the law may be firmly on your side — and it may even presume the landlord retaliated.
Get Your Free Case ReviewRetaliation happens when a landlord punishes you for exercising a legal right — like asking for repairs, complaining to the city, using “repair and deduct,” or joining a tenant association. The punishment usually looks like an eviction notice, a sudden rent increase, or the loss of a service such as parking or laundry.
California protects renters for a simple reason: if landlords could evict tenants for reporting unsafe conditions, no one would ever report them. Civil Code §1942.5 makes that kind of payback illegal.
The key is timing and motive — and California law gives tenants a powerful head start on proving both.
Retaliation is rarely spelled out. It usually arrives disguised as an ordinary “business decision” — right after you stood up for yourself.
An eviction notice that lands soon after you complained about conditions or asserted a legal right — including pretextual “no-fault” or “remodel” notices.
A sudden or targeted rent hike meant to punish you — not a standard, across-the-board increase that follows the rules.
Revoking parking, laundry, storage, or other amenities you were promised — using them as leverage to punish or push you out.
Even threatening to evict you, raise your rent, or cut your services in response to a complaint is a violation on its own.
Threatening to report you or your family to immigration authorities is an explicitly prohibited form of retaliation (Civil Code §1942.5).
Targeting you for joining or forming a tenant association is illegal — and here there is no 180-day or rent-current limit on your protection.
Retaliation is both a shield and a sword — it can stop an eviction and let you recover money. Depending on the facts, a claim may include:
Retaliation is a complete defense to an eviction. Proving it can defeat the case and keep you in your home.
A court can order the landlord to stop — for example, blocking a retaliatory rent increase before it forces you out.
Moving and storage costs, temporary housing, the higher rent you pay at a new place, and related out-of-pocket losses.
For malicious retaliation, the law allows penalties of $100 to $2,000 for each retaliatory act (Civil Code §1942.5).
The stress and fear of a retaliatory eviction or harassment campaign can be compensable harm.
Civil Code §1942.5 makes the landlord pay your attorney’s fees when you win — which is why we can take these cases at no upfront cost.
No. California Civil Code §1942.5 prohibits a landlord from evicting you, raising your rent, or cutting services to punish you for requesting repairs or reporting bad conditions. If the action comes within 180 days of your complaint, the law presumes it is retaliation and the landlord must prove a legitimate reason.
A rent increase is illegal if its purpose is to punish you. A standard, across-the-board increase that follows the law is generally fine — but a sudden or targeted hike aimed at you after a complaint can be unlawful retaliation, and worth having reviewed.
If your landlord evicts you, raises your rent, or cuts services within about 180 days (six months) of a protected complaint, the law presumes the action is retaliatory and shifts the burden to the landlord to prove otherwise. After 180 days you can still prove retaliation — you just lose the automatic presumption.
Be careful. For retaliation tied to habitability complaints, you generally need to be current on rent to use the strongest protection. Do not withhold rent without following the strict legal rules — doing it wrong can hand the landlord grounds to evict you. Talk to an attorney first.
No. Threatening to report you or anyone associated with you to immigration authorities is an explicitly illegal form of retaliation under Civil Code §1942.5 — and it applies regardless of immigration status.
A claim can include your actual damages (moving costs, higher rent, temporary housing), statutory penalties of $100 to $2,000 per retaliatory act for malicious conduct, and emotional-distress damages. Because §1942.5 makes the landlord pay your attorney’s fees when you win, we can usually take these cases with no upfront cost — and the case review is always free.
A retaliatory eviction is one kind of illegal eviction — see the full picture of your rights.
Learn MoreRetaliation sometimes escalates into a lockout or utility shutoff — which is urgent and illegal.
Learn MoreRetaliation often comes wrapped in harassment, threats, and intimidation.
Learn More