California homeowners have some of the strongest legal protections in the country against contractor misconduct. This guide covers every right you have — and how to use them.
When you hire a contractor, you enter a legally binding contract. If the contractor fails to complete the work, performs defective work, charges more than agreed, or abandons the project, they have breached that contract. California Civil Code §1549 et seq. governs contracts, and a breach entitles you to damages — meaning financial compensation for what you lost.
Recoverable damages for contractor breach of contract include the cost to repair defective work, the cost to complete unfinished work, any difference between what you paid and the value received, consequential damages like alternative housing costs if the home was uninhabitable, and attorney fees if your contract includes a fee-shifting provision.
Even an oral contract — one with no written document — is enforceable in California for construction work under $500. For projects over $500, California Business and Professions Code §7159 requires a written contract containing specific disclosures. A contractor who fails to provide the required written contract may be disciplined by the CSLB and loses certain legal protections.
Independent of your contract, contractors have a duty of care to perform work in a reasonably skillful manner consistent with professional standards. When a contractor's work falls below this standard — installing plumbing that leaks, framing that doesn't meet code, electrical work that creates fire hazards — they are negligent.
A negligence claim allows you to recover damages even for issues not specifically addressed in your contract. It also opens up potential recovery from the contractor's liability insurance policy, which is separate from their surety bond.
Bay Legal PC in Palo Alto handles contractor disputes throughout California. Free initial consultations available.
Get a Free Consultation →California Business and Professions Code §7000 et seq. — the Contractors State License Law — is one of the most powerful consumer protection statutes in the state. Key provisions that protect you:
Every licensed California contractor must maintain a contractor's license bond with a minimum value of $25,000. This bond is a financial guarantee — if the contractor fails to perform, causes damage, or commits fraud, you can file a claim against the bond to recover your losses without having to sue the contractor directly.
Bond claims are administered by the bonding company (surety), not the CSLB. You must file the claim within the bond's term and within applicable statutes of limitations. The bonding company investigates and, if the claim is valid, pays up to the bond amount. If your damages exceed $25,000, you must pursue the remainder through litigation.
When contractor misconduct crosses from civil breach into criminal territory, additional remedies become available. California Penal Code §532 (theft by false pretenses) applies when a contractor accepts payment with no intention of performing the work. California Business and Professions Code §7160 (home improvement fraud) applies when a contractor takes excessive deposits or abandons a project.
Filing a police report and a CSLB complaint simultaneously creates a record of criminal conduct that strengthens your civil case. Prosecutors occasionally pursue contractor fraud cases, particularly in high-dollar situations or when a contractor has victimized multiple homeowners.
The California Contractors State License Board regulates over 280,000 licensed contractors. Filing a CSLB complaint is free, relatively fast, and gives you access to administrative remedies that go beyond what courts can order. The CSLB can suspend or revoke a contractor's license, require them to arbitrate your dispute, and in some cases facilitate settlement through its Arbitration Program.
The CSLB's Contractors License Bond Program can also pay claims when a contractor fails to perform — this is separate from the contractor's own surety bond. See our complete guide to filing a CSLB complaint.
If the contractor who performed your work was not licensed by the CSLB at the time the work was performed, your rights are substantially stronger than in a standard dispute. Under Business and Professions Code §7031(b), you can sue the unlicensed contractor to recover all compensation paid — even if the work was done properly and you were satisfied with it. This is sometimes called the "disgorgement" remedy.
You do not need to prove defects, damages, or fraud. The sole fact of unlicensed status entitles you to a full refund of all amounts paid. See our complete guide to unlicensed contractor disputes.
Bay Legal PC handles construction disputes throughout California. Tell us about your situation and we'll be in touch promptly.
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