Financing Rent-Controlled Apartments in Los Angeles
Los Angeles County is not one rent-control regime, it is at least nine: City of LA RSO, seven-plus separate municipal ordinances, unincorporated county rules, and statewide AB 1482 layered on top of all of it. Getting the jurisdiction and cutoff date right changes how a lender sizes an apartment loan, sometimes by a meaningful margin. This guide covers how each regime actually works and what it means for financing.
The Numbers That Matter
The Patchwork, in Plain English
Inside the City of Los Angeles, the Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) covers residential buildings with two or more units that received a certificate of occupancy on or before October 1, 1978. RSO sets a CPI-based annual increase formula, requires relocation assistance for certain unit removals, and layers on SCEP seismic inspection and just-cause eviction rules.
Buildings built after that date, once they turn 15 years old, generally fall under statewide AB 1482 instead: a simpler cap of 5% plus local CPI with a 10% absolute ceiling, plus its own just-cause eviction requirements. New construction is exempt from both regimes for its first 15 years.
Then there is the rest of the county. Santa Monica, West Hollywood, Beverly Hills, Culver City, Inglewood, and Pasadena all run their own, separately administered rent ordinances with different cutoff dates and cap formulas. Unincorporated LA County has its own ordinance too. And a meaningful list of incorporated cities, including Glendale, Burbank, Long Beach, Torrance, and El Segundo, have no local rent cap at all, leaving AB 1482 as the only regulation.
Costa-Hawkins and Vacancy Decontrol
The one rule that runs through nearly every local ordinance in the county is Costa-Hawkins vacancy decontrol: when a regulated unit turns over to a new tenant, the landlord can reset the rent to market. That single mechanism is the foundation of nearly every value-add apartment business plan in LA. A sponsor buying a regulated building at a discount to market rents is usually betting on turning over units over a hold period, not on rent-cap increases alone getting them to market.
Costa-Hawkins also draws the line for local rent control eligibility in several cities: buildings built after February 1995 are generally exempt from local ordinances statewide (though they may still fall under AB 1482 once they age past 15 years).
How Lenders Actually Underwrite This
Lenders size regulated buildings to the in-place, regulated rent roll, not to a blanket market-rent assumption. That is the single biggest difference between underwriting a Sherman Oaks dingbat and a comparable exempt building in Century City. A credible, unit-by-unit turnover schedule, showing which units are likely to turn over and when, is what lets a bridge lender price in future rent growth without overstating it.
Different lender types gravitate toward different parts of this trade. Bridge funds underwrite the renovate-at-turnover business plan directly. Banks and credit unions with deep local knowledge are comfortable financing stabilized regulated buildings at conservative leverage. Agency lenders (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) will finance stabilized regulated rolls too, provided the rent roll and expense history support the debt service coverage they require.
Matching the right lender to the specific regulatory regime and business plan, rather than treating every LA apartment building the same, is what separates full proceeds from a retrade at the term sheet stage.
Financing Rent-Controlled Apartments in Los Angeles: FAQ
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