Called, “tenant assistanceâ€, here is what an owner would pay the tenant to relocate:
- $2,706 for a studio
- $3,235 for a one-bedroom
- $4,185 for a two-bedroom
- And as much as $4,500 for three bedrooms or move to relocate.
What properties are excluded?
- The landlord owns four or fewer units within the city boundaries.
- The landlord lives in a unit of the building they own.
- If the owner is relocating the tenant to move a family member in that unit.
- All buildings built after 1995 to keep in compliance with the Costa-Hawkins state law.
What triggers the relocation fee?
- A landlord increases the rent by 10% or more in a 12-month period.
- The tenant has been in the unit for 12 months or more.
- The owner needs the tenant to move to rehabilitate the unit.
There are a couple of unintended consequences because of this new law:
- Since owners can increase rents 10% without triggering this fee, I suspect many owners will increase rents up to 9% to start collecting funds to pay for this future relocation fee. A tenant currently paying $1,500 a month might experience a 9% increase (of $135) to pay for their relocation 3 years from now.
- It now pays for a tenant to be difficult. An enterprising tenant may want to make the life of an owner so difficult such as annoying other tenants, bending the rules, disturbing the general piece of an apartment complex, that an owner will pay to restore the peace. The owner will find a better tenant and the former tenant walks away with a little over $4,000 in cash.
