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A new California law quietly went into effect on January 1, 2026, and it dramatically changes the legal risk of owning rental property in the state. If you’re a landlord — even a small one with just one or two units — this could put tens of thousands of dollars at risk. In this video, we break down the Tenant Protection and Accountability Act of 2026, a sweeping law that expands tenant rights and allows renters to sue landlords directly for violations that used to result in small fines or warnings. These lawsuits can now start at $5,000 per violation and climb to $25,000 or more — even for issues many landlords consider “minor.” 🏠 In this video, you’ll learn: What the new 2026 California landlord law actually does Why tenants can now bypass housing authorities and sue directly Common “small” mistakes that can trigger $10k–$25k lawsuits How repair delays, deposits, notices, and disclosures are being targeted Why multi-unit landlords face compounding legal risk How retaliation claims now work — and why landlords often lose Why insurance may NOT cover these lawsuits Step-by-step actions landlords must take right now to protect themselves ⚠️ Even experienced, well-intentioned landlords are getting caught off guard. Courts are already seeing cases filed under this law, and many are settling out of court to avoid massive legal fees. 📌 If you own rental property in California, this is mandatory viewing. 👍 Subscribe for updates on landlord laws, tenant rules, real estate regulation, and investment risk 💬 Comment below: Are you a California landlord? How is this law changing the way you manage your property? 📤 Share this with another landlord — most won’t hear about this until it’s too late