California's 21-Day Security Deposit Rule (Civil Code § 1950.5)
California has some of the strongest tenant security deposit protections in the nation. Under Civil Code § 1950.5(g), your landlord has exactly 21 calendar days after you vacate to either return your full deposit or send you:
- ✓A written itemized statement of all deductions
- ✓A check for any remaining balance (or a statement that no balance remains)
- ✓Copies of receipts or invoices for all claimed repairs and cleaning costs
If your landlord misses the 21-day deadline entirely — no refund, no itemization — California courts treat this as strong evidence of bad faith. Under § 1950.5(l), a court finding of bad faith triggers a penalty of up to twice the amount wrongfully withheld, on top of the actual deposit amount. The statutory potential remedy can include the wrongfully withheld amount plus a court-discretionary statutory penalty.
Exception: Large Repairs
If repairs exceeding $125 cannot be completed within 21 days, the landlord may send a good-faith estimate within the 21-day window and the final accounting within 14 days of completion (§ 1950.5(g)(2)). This exception is narrow — the landlord must begin repairs promptly and cannot use it to indefinitely delay accounting.
What California Landlords Can — and Cannot — Deduct
✓ Permissible Deductions (§ 1950.5(b))
Unpaid rent
Any rent due through the last day of tenancy
Damage beyond normal wear and tear
Holes in walls, broken fixtures, pet stains, burns
Cleaning (above move-in level)
Only to restore to move-in cleanliness, not above
Replacement of personal property
Only if allowed by written rental agreement
✗ Prohibited Deductions
Normal wear and tear
Small scuffs, minor carpet wear, aged paint, worn fixtures
Pre-existing damage
Any damage documented on the move-in checklist
Professional cleaning mandated by lease
Can't require professional cleaning if unit was left clean
Betterment / upgrades
Can't charge tenant for improvements that extend property life beyond its age
Unjustified inflated repair costs
Must reflect actual market-rate contractor costs
Items not itemized within 21 days
Late itemizations are unenforceable
California Security Deposit Statutes at a Glance
| Statute | Rule | Remedy / Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| CC § 1950.5(b) | Permissible deduction categories | Deductions outside these 4 categories are unauthorized |
| CC § 1950.5(c) | Deposit limit: twice monthly rent (unfurnished), three times monthly rent (furnished) | Any deposit collected above the limit must be refunded |
| CC § 1950.5(f) | Pre-move-in inspection rights (tenant can request) | Landlord must provide opportunity + written notice of deficiencies |
| CC § 1950.5(g) | 21-day return deadline + itemization + receipts | Missing deadline = strong bad-faith evidence |
| CC § 1950.5(l) | Bad-faith penalty | Court may award a statutory penalty and attorney fees where allowed |
| CC § 1950.5(m) | Pre-move-out inspection (tenant right) | Tenant can request walk-through 2 weeks before move-out |
| CCP § 116.220 | Small claims court jurisdiction | $12,500 limit for individuals — most security deposit cases qualify |
| Civ. Code § 1717 | Attorney fees clause enforcement | If lease has fee clause, prevailing tenant may recover fees |
What Your California Security Deposit Demand Letter Must Include
A poorly worded demand letter may settle the dispute — but a formally prepared letter citing the correct statutes, with specific penalty calculations, is materially more effective. Here is what every California security deposit demand letter should contain:
- 1
Your name, move-out date, and former address
Include your full legal name, the address of the rental unit, your move-out date, and your current mailing address. The move-out date is critical — it starts the 21-day clock. If you have a dispute about when your tenancy officially ended, document your position clearly.
- 2
The landlord's full legal name and entity (if applicable)
Address the letter to the individual landlord or the registered property management company. For corporate landlords, use the exact legal entity name from the California Secretary of State. Misspelling the landlord's name weakens the letter's legal force and makes service harder if you proceed to court.
- 3
The total deposit amount paid and any amount returned
State the exact security deposit you paid (with dates and amounts), any partial refund already received, and the exact dollar amount you are demanding back. If you paid a pet deposit or cleaning deposit separately, list each component with the amount. Courts need precise numbers to enter a judgment.
- 4
Specific objections to each deduction (if partial refund)
If the landlord sent a partial refund with itemized deductions, address each improper deduction by name. For each one, explain why it constitutes normal wear and tear, pre-existing damage, or an improper category under § 1950.5(b). Reference your move-in inspection report or photographs where available.
- 5
Citation of Civil Code § 1950.5 and the 21-day rule
Cite the specific statute — § 1950.5(g) for the 21-day deadline and § 1950.5(l) for the bad-faith penalty. This keeps the legal issue clear and gives the landlord a written opportunity to address the disputed deductions before further escalation.
- 6
The bad-faith penalty argument
If the landlord missed the 21-day deadline entirely, or if the deductions are clearly improper (e.g., deducting for normal paint wear), preserve the § 1950.5(l) bad-faith penalty argument. The letter should explain the facts supporting that argument without treating the penalty as automatic.
- 7
A 14-day or 21-day response deadline
Give the landlord a specific date to respond — 14 to 21 days is appropriate. State clearly that if no response is received, you will file in the appropriate California Small Claims Court without further notice, seeking the full deposit plus statutory penalties and attorney fees where applicable.
- 8
California attorney review
A formally prepared letter from a California legal technology platform demonstrates knowledge of the applicable statutes and signals you are prepared to escalate. California attorney review is available for eligible matters through the xCounsel platform.
Evidence to Gather Before Sending Your Demand Letter
The stronger your documentation, the higher the probability of settlement and of prevailing in small claims if it comes to that. Gather as much of the following as possible before ordering your demand letter:
Move-in photos / video
Dated photos from move-in day documenting the unit's condition in each room. These are the single most important piece of evidence in any security deposit dispute.
Move-in inspection report
The signed move-in checklist — if your landlord provided one. If they did not, note this in your demand letter (landlords who fail to provide a pre-move-in inspection are in a weaker position on damage claims).
Move-out photos / video
Dated photos from your final day in the unit, ideally with a timestamp. Photograph every room, every wall, inside all appliances, and the carpet in every room.
Lease agreement
The signed lease specifying the deposit amount, any permitted deductions, and whether a pre-move-out inspection was offered. Flag any clauses that purport to require mandatory cleaning fees — these are often unenforceable.
Deposit payment receipts
Bank records, money order receipts, or canceled checks showing the exact amount you paid and when. Include pet deposits or furniture deposits separately.
Landlord's itemized statement (if received)
A copy of whatever the landlord sent within (or after) 21 days — even if you believe every deduction is improper. Your demand letter should dispute it line by line.
Repair estimates / contractor quotes
If the landlord's itemization includes inflated repair costs, get competing quotes from licensed contractors for the same work. A $1,200 cleaning bill on a studio apartment is demonstrably unreasonable if you have a quote for $150.
All communications with landlord
Text messages, emails, voicemails, and letters from move-out to present. These establish the landlord's awareness of the dispute and their conduct, which is directly relevant to the bad-faith penalty analysis.
Your Right to a Pre-Move-Out Inspection (§ 1950.5(f))
California tenants have a statutory right to request a pre-move-out inspection within the two weeks before move-out (Civil Code § 1950.5(f)). This is a powerful tool most tenants don't know exists. Here's why it matters:
What happens at the inspection
The landlord (or their agent) walks through the unit with you and identifies any conditions they believe justify a deposit deduction. They must give you a written itemized statement of deficiencies at the time of the inspection — before you move out.
Your opportunity to cure
After receiving the pre-move-out statement, you have the right to fix the identified issues before you move out. If you clean the stove, patch the wall, or hire a carpet cleaner based on the pre-move-out list, the landlord cannot later deduct for those same items — you cured them.
How to request the inspection
Send a written request to your landlord at least 2 weeks before your move-out date: 'I am requesting a pre-move-out inspection pursuant to Civil Code § 1950.5(f) on [date] at [time]. Please confirm your availability.' Save a copy of the request.
If the landlord refuses
A landlord who refuses to conduct a pre-move-out inspection after a timely written request is in a weaker position to claim post-move-out damage deductions. Note the refusal in your demand letter — it's relevant to the bad-faith analysis.
Filing in Small Claims Court — California County Guide
If your demand letter is ignored, file in the small claims court for the county where the rental property was located. Most security deposit disputes fall well under the $12,500 individual limit. Select your county for court details.
The xCounsel Security Deposit Demand Letter Process
Tell us your situation
Describe the deposit amount, your move-out date, what the landlord did (or didn't do) within 21 days, and any improper deductions. Attach your move-in photos and the landlord's itemization if you have them. Takes about 5 minutes.
Attorney drafts and signs
A California-licensed attorney reviews your facts for eligible matters, applies § 1950.5 correctly, identifies any bad-faith penalty issues, and prepares a firm demand letter citing the applicable provisions. Limited-scope review, priority handling.
Send certified mail — collect or file
Mail via certified mail + first-class mail. Keep your USPS receipt. If the landlord pays, done. If they ignore it, you have a court-admissible Exhibit A for small claims — and a stronger bad-faith argument because they had written notice.
Pricing
Three tiers depending on your dispute complexity. All work performed or reviewed by a California-licensed attorney. No subscription. No hidden fees.
Free AI Draft
$0
AI-generated demand letter citing § 1950.5 using your facts. AI document preparation — no attorney review. Best for disputes under $500 where you need a professional letter fast.
- ✓ AI-drafted in minutes
- ✓ § 1950.5 citations included
- ✓ Bad-faith penalty issue language
- ✓ PDF download
- ✓ AI document preparation — no attorney review
Quick Attorney Review
$99
A California-licensed attorney reviews your draft for eligible matters, adds the correct statutory citations and bad-faith penalty calculation, and provides limited-scope review. Best for disputes $500–$5,000.
- ✓ Eligible attorney review
- ✓ California attorney review included
- ✓ § 1950.5(l) penalty calculation
- ✓ Move-out date analysis
- ✓ Priority handling
- ✓ 1 revision included
Standard Attorney Letter
$249
Full attorney-drafted letter contesting each improper deduction line by line, with complete statutory analysis and evidence checklist. California attorney review for eligible matters. Best for disputes $5,000+ or disputed itemizations.
- ✓ Fully attorney-drafted
- ✓ Line-by-line deduction analysis
- ✓ Full § 1950.5 statutory framework
- ✓ Evidence checklist
- ✓ Mailing instructions
- ✓ Priority handling
- ✓ 2 revisions included
Frequently Asked Questions
California attorney review available for eligible matters
Limited-scope review available for eligible matters with an independent California-licensed attorney, subject to conflicts check.
Related California Legal Letters
Small Claims Demand Letter
When your security deposit dispute goes to small claims, this is your Exhibit A. County courts + filing guide.
General Demand Letter California
General-purpose demand letter for any California dispute. Attorney review available, flat fee.
Cease and Desist Letter
Formal notice for harassment, illegal lockouts, or unlawful entry by landlords. 7 use cases covered.
Breach of Contract Letter
When a lease agreement violation goes beyond the security deposit — habitability, repairs, early termination fees.
West Hollywood Security Deposit Guide
XC02 supporting article for West Hollywood tenants under California Civil Code § 1950.5.
California 21-Day Deposit Deadline
How long landlords have to return deposits, itemize deductions, and preserve receipts.
