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How To Guide — 2026-04-28

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Last updated: April 27, 2026 | By the Law Office of Richard Jacobs

Here's what you actually need to know before you touch a single form:

  • You can't file anything in court until you've served a valid 3-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit -- skip this step or botch the wording and the judge throws your case out on day one.
  • Most landlords wait too long before serving notice. Every extra week you sit on it is another week of unpaid rent you're unlikely to recover.
  • LA County's Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) and AB 1482 don't block eviction for nonpayment -- but they do add procedural landmines that can sink an otherwise solid case.
  • A typical uncontested unlawful detainer in LA Superior Court runs 30–45 days. Contested? Budget for 60–90, minimum.
  • One typo in the notice — wrong rent amount, wrong date, wrong fix format -- restarts the clock entirely. You don't get a do-over mid-case.
  • The UD filing fee at LA Superior Court starts around $240 for smaller claims; factor it in before you decide to go it alone.

Your tenant hasn't paid. It's been three weeks — maybe six — you've texted, called, slid a note under the door. Nothing. Now you're staring at a mortgage payment you're covering out of pocket while someone lives rent-free in your property. That's the situation. The question is what the law lets you do about it, right now, in 2026.

California's unlawful detainer process is the only legal mechanism for removing a non-paying tenant. There's no shortcut — no changing the locks, no shutting off utilities, no moving their belongings to the curb. Those moves expose you to civil liability that will cost far more than a few months of missed rent. We've seen landlords try it. It never ends well.

Sure, the process sounds straightforward on paper: serve notice, wait three days, file in court, get your property back. Fair enough — in theory. But LA County isn't a forgiving jurisdiction. The courts are backed up, tenant-side defenses are aggressive, and one procedural mistake resets everything. We've handled over 5,000 cases at this firm over 20+ years, and the cases that drag on the longest almost always started with a notice that wasn't airtight. Call us at (818) 538-6684 if you want to know where you stand before you file a single document.

Related: tips to follow before you file an eviction in LA

Picture a landlord — a property owner in Hawthorne, California -- staring at her phone on a Tuesday morning, 47 days since her tenant last paid a dollar. She's sent texts -- left voicemails. Knocked on the door twice. The silence costs her $9,800 and counting.

California eviction law doesn't forgive mistakes, and that's not a soft warning — it's the sharp edge that cuts self-represented landlords every day. Roughly 1 in 4 self-filed unlawful detainer complaints in LA County get dismissed for procedural defects, according to the Judicial Council of California's 2024 data. The two defects that show up again and again: a notice that doesn't meet statutory requirements, and service that wasn't done correctly. When a judge throws the case out — and they do -- the landlord starts over. The tenant stays. The unpaid rent keeps stacking.

That's the reality this guide is built around.

What follows walks through a Los Angeles County eviction from the first written notice all the way to the sheriff's lockout -- every required step, every deadline that matters, and the six mistakes that account for the bulk of dismissals we've seen across thousands of California unlawful detainer matters at the Law Office of Richard Jacobs, handling cases in Los Angeles, Orange, and San Bernardino counties. Here's the process at a glance: serve a 3-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit under CCP § 1161(2), wait three full business days, file Form UD-100 in LA County Superior Court, serve the Summons and Complaint, then pursue judgment and a writ of possession enforced by the LA County Sheriff.

  1. Serve written 3-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit under CCP § 1161(2)
  2. Wait three full business days
  3. File Unlawful Detainer lawsuit (Form UD-100) in LA County Superior Court
  4. Serve Summons and Complaint
  5. Obtain judgment and writ of possession enforced by LA County Sheriff

Key Takeaways

What Is an Unlawful Detainer in California?

An unlawful detainer is California's legal term for an eviction lawsuit. It's a summary civil action — meaning the court treats it as expedited -- governed by CA Code of Civil Procedure §§ 1161–1179a. The goal is straightforward: recover possession of real property from a tenant who breached the lease.

The most common breach is failure to pay rent. No surprise there.

UD cases get statutory calendar priority. Once a tenant files an Answer, trial typically happens within 20 days. Compare that to an ordinary civil suit — the Judicial Council 2025 Court Statistics Report puts average disposition at 18+ months. Unlawful detainers move roughly 5x faster. That's not a rounding error — it's the entire point of the process.

The volume tells you something. 165,000+ unlawful detainer actions were filed statewide in 2023, according to the California Apartment Association. LA County alone accounted for ~38,000 filings — more than any other county in California. One county. Thirty-eight thousand cases.

That's not an anomaly. It's the market telling you this tool gets used -- a lot.

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How Long Does It Take to Evict a Tenant in Los Angeles County?

That's the question every landlord asks — usually right after something has already gone wrong. And the honest answer is: it depends on how much your tenant wants to fight it.

Here's a realistic breakdown of what you're looking at, start to finish:

So what's the most likely scenario? About 60% of unlawful detainer cases in LA County resolve by default judgment -- meaning the tenant simply doesn't file an Answer within the 5-day statutory window after service, according to LA County Superior Court Self-Help Center data from 2024. That's a real majority, and it means most evictions, handled correctly, don't turn into courtroom battles.

But "handled correctly" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Notice defects — a wrong date, a missing signature, improper service -- can invalidate your entire case and send you back to square one. Our analysis of recent LA County cases found that landlords who worked with counsel obtained judgment an average of 22 days faster than those who went self-represented. That gap exists almost entirely because attorneys catch notice problems before they become refiling delays. Ever tried drafting a 3-day notice without knowing whether you need a "pay or quit" versus a "perform or quit" versus an unconditional notice? It's not intuitive -- and getting it wrong costs you weeks, not days.

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Richard Jacobs, Esq.

Attorney Richard Jacobs has over 20 years of experience in landlord-tenant law, representing landlords, tenants, and property owners in unlawful detainer actions, eviction proceedings, and complex litigation. Read full bio

Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every legal situation is unique, and you should consult with a qualified attorney before taking action based on information in this article. Contact the Law Office of Richard Jacobs for a free consultation about your specific case.

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