The RegistryDesert · California

Landlord–Tenant Attorneys in Palm Springs, California

Counsel for rentals on both sides of the lease — evictions, deposits, and habitability. In Palm Springs, that work runs through Riverside County's courts, and this page holds the record: landlord–tenant coverage for Palm Springs drawn from official State Bar of California data, ranked by the published Growth Score.

Venue matters. Landlord–tenant cases from Palm Springs are ordinarily heard at the Riverside County Superior Court — Palm Springs branch, serving a city of roughly 45,000. Desert-region matters are split between Riverside County Superior Court's Palm Springs courthouse and the larger Larson Justice Center in Indio; a retiree-heavy population keeps estate, trust, and elder matters unusually prominent in the Coachella Valley.

One date controls everything that follows: unlawful detainer deadlines run in days — a three-day notice starts most non-payment cases, per Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 1161. A tenant served with an unlawful detainer summons has ten court days to respond (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 1167). Security deposits must be accounted for within 21 days of move-out (Cal. Civ. Code § 1950.5). Read the record below with that clock in mind.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

Unlawful detainer deadlines run in days — a three-day notice starts most non-payment cases.

Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 1161

A tenant served with an unlawful detainer summons has ten court days to respond (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 1167). Security deposits must be accounted for within 21 days of move-out (Cal. Civ. Code § 1950.5).

Reading the roster in Palm Springs

Unlawful detainer practice is fast and procedural, so look for attorneys who handle evictions in your county's dedicated UD departments weekly, whichever side you are on. Tenants should ask about fee-shifting clauses in the lease, local rent-ordinance defenses, and legal-aid options given the short response windows; landlords should ask about notice drafting — most lost UD cases fail on defective notices.

Landlord–Tenant · Riverside County roster

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Landlord–Tenant questions, cited

How much can my landlord raise rent in California?

For most residential property older than 15 years, the Tenant Protection Act caps annual increases at 5% plus regional CPI, never exceeding 10% (Cal. Civ. Code § 1947.12). Single-family homes owned by individuals are often exempt if proper notice is given. Local ordinances in cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland impose stricter caps that control when they apply.

When must a security deposit be returned in California?

Within 21 calendar days after the tenant moves out, with an itemized statement of any deductions and receipts for repairs over $125 (Cal. Civ. Code § 1950.5). Since July 2024, deposits are generally capped at one month's rent (Civ. Code § 1950.5(c), as amended by AB 12). Bad-faith retention exposes the landlord to up to twice the deposit in statutory damages.

Can my landlord evict me without cause in California?

For most tenancies of 12 months or longer, no — the Tenant Protection Act requires "just cause" for termination (Cal. Civ. Code § 1946.2), either at-fault (non-payment, breach, nuisance) or no-fault (owner move-in, withdrawal from the market), with relocation assistance owed for no-fault terminations. Exempt properties and shorter tenancies follow ordinary notice rules (Civ. Code §§ 1946, 1946.1).

What can I do if my rental is uninhabitable?

California implies a warranty of habitability in every residential lease; Cal. Civ. Code § 1941.1 lists minimum standards (working plumbing, heat, weatherproofing, no vermin). After notice and a reasonable time, tenants may use the repair-and-deduct remedy up to one month's rent (Civ. Code § 1942), and retaliation for exercising these rights is prohibited for 180 days (Civ. Code § 1942.5).

How fast does an eviction case move in California?

Faster than almost any other civil case. After the notice period (often three days for non-payment, Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 1161), the landlord files an unlawful detainer; the tenant has ten court days to respond (§ 1167), and trial is set within about 20 days of a trial request (§ 1170.5). Tenants who wait to seek advice often lose by default before defenses are ever heard.

Legal information, not legal advice.

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