LA County Eviction Threshold Raised to 2 Months: Cash Flow Risk for Multifamily Owners
Los Angeles County has approved an ordinance increasing the minimum eviction threshold to two months of Fair Market Rent (FMR) for properties under the Rent Stabilization and Tenant Protections Ordinance (RSTPO) in unincorporated areas. The policy becomes effective April 16, 2026, and applies across all residential rental types.
This change directly impacts how quickly owners can respond to non-payment and increases exposure to rent loss.
Housing providers are also now required to submit termination notices, including supporting documentation, to the Department of Consumer and Business Affairs (DCBA) for compliance review.
Why It Matters
This policy extends the timeline before enforcement can begin, increasing both the duration and magnitude of unpaid rent exposure per unit. This shifts risk from enforcement to operations, where owners must absorb longer periods of non-payment before taking action.
For multifamily owners, this directly impacts cash flow timing, bad debt risk, and overall asset stability, particularly in properties operating with tighter margins or inconsistent tenant payment profiles.
To put this in concrete terms: according to HUD’s FY2026 Fair Market Rents (effective October 1, 2025), the countywide FMR for a 2-bedroom unit in the LA Metro area is $2,625 per month. Under the new ordinance, that means an owner of a 2-bedroom unit cannot initiate eviction proceedings until a tenant has accumulated at least $5,250 in unpaid rent. For a 3-bedroom, that figure rises to $6,670. Across a 10-unit building with even two or three delinquent tenants, potential exposure before enforcement begins can exceed $15,000–$20,000—all while operational costs continue.
Lucrum’s Perspective
This is a shift in how operational risk is managed at the property level.
As enforcement timelines extend, the focus moves to front-end discipline—tenant selection, rent collection systems, and reserve planning. Owners who operate with structured processes will maintain stability. Those without them will see performance variability.
Next Steps for Owners & Investors
- Refine Tenant Screening Standards: Prioritize verified income, payment consistency, and long-term stability.
- Implement Proactive Rent Collection Systems: Track delinquencies early and establish structured follow-up timelines.
- Reassess Operating Reserves: Ensure reserves are sufficient to absorb extended non-payment periods.
- Review Asset-Level Risk Exposure: Evaluate the current tenant base and identify potential exposure points before they impact performance.
Decision Output
Owners should strengthen screening, collections, and reserve strategies to offset longer eviction timelines and protect consistent cash flow.
For assets in unincorporated LA County, this is the time to re-underwrite operational risk before it impacts NOI.
Every policy change creates a shift in value. The key is understanding where.
Clarity creates better decisions. Strategy protects performance.
If you own multifamily property in Los Angeles County, we can help you evaluate your current position and align your strategy with today’s operating environment.
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FAQs
What areas are affected by this ordinance?
This applies to rental properties in unincorporated Los Angeles County under the RSTPO.
When does the new eviction threshold take effect?
The policy becomes effective April 16, 2026.
What is the new requirement for eviction?
Owners must wait until a tenant is behind at least two months of Fair Market Rent (FMR) before initiating eviction proceedings.
How does this affect multifamily owners?
It increases delinquency exposure and delays enforcement, requiring stronger operational controls and financial planning.
Source: AGGLA & USHousingData