🏛️ Senate Bills (SB)

SB 79 – Transit‑Oriented Housing & CEQA Bypass

Allows mid-rise housing (4–6 stories) within ½ mile of major transit stops, overrides CEQA on transit-agency land, and mandates affordable-unit requirements.
Click here to see SB 79

SB 1123 – Vacant Lot Subdivision Streamlining

Extends streamlined, ministerial subdivision approval—up to 10 homes—for vacant single-family lots under 1.5 acres near amenities; doesn’t count ADUs.
Click here to see SB 1123

SB 436 – Extended “Pay or Quit” Notice Period

Extends California’s eviction “pay or quit” notice from 3 to 14 days before filing unlawful detainer – giving tenants more time to catch up on rent.
Click here to see SB 436

SB 1037 – Housing Element Enforcement

Allows penalties—including legal action—against cities failing to update housing elements or meet state housing goals under fair enforcement standards.
Click here to see SB 1037

SB 9 (HOME Act) – Lot Splits & Duplexes by Right

Enables single-family lot splits and duplex builds by right, with limits on local design control, parking near transit, and added tenant protections.
Click here to see SB 9 (HOME Act)

SB 450 – Strengthening SB 9 Implementation

Requires cities to process SB 9 applications within 60 days, removes opaque design rules, and empowers state-level enforcement actions.
Click here to see SB 450

SB 1211 – Expanded ADU Approvals

Allows up to eight detached ADUs per lot (matching unit counts) and prohibits replacement parking requirements when converting spaces.
Click here to see SB 1211

SB 1164 – ADU Property-Tax Exemption

Adds a 15-year property tax exemption for accessory dwelling units, excluding ADU construction value from reassessment.
Click here to see SB 1164

SB 423 – SB 35 Multifamily Streamlining Extended

Extends and expands multifamily project streamlining (SB 35) through 2036, now including coastal zones and charter cities.
Click here to see SB 423 - SB35

SB 684 – Small-Lot Subdivision Simplification

Mandates ministerial approval for up to 10-unit subdivisions in multifamily zones, with 60-day decision timelines.
Click here to see SB 684


🏗️ Assembly Bills (AB)

AB 2553 – Transit Area Housing Expansion

Broadens “major transit stop” definition (<20‑minute frequency) and waives traffic fees to encourage housing near transit hubs.
Click here to see AB 2553

AB 2097 – End Parking Mandates Near Transit

Prohibits parking minimums for residential development within ½ mile of major transit stops, with hardship exemptions.
Click here to see AB 2097

AB 2712 – Transit-Area Parking Permit Limitations

Stops cities (e.g., LA) from issuing preferential parking permits to residents of developments near major transit nodes.
Click here to see AB 2712

AB 2011 – Affordable Housing & High‑Road Jobs

Creates streamlined, CEQA-exempt paths for affordable/mixed-income housing on commercial sites, requiring prevailing wages/apprenticeships.
Click here to see AB 2011

AB 2243 – Broader Affordable Zones & Height Limit Lift

Expands AB 2011/SB 6 to include sites near malls, corridors, freeways; raises up to 65 ft height limits near transit corridors.
Click here to see AB 2243

🏘️ Other Key Related Laws

SB 35Housing Streamlining Law
Mandates CEQA-exempt, by-right approval for housing developments in jurisdictions underperforming state quotas en.wikipedia.org+1kendalllaw.net+1.

SB 35 / SB 423 updateExpanding Multifamily Streamlining
SB 423 extends SB 35 and widens reach—now covers charter cities, coastal zones en.wikipedia.org+6en.wikipedia.org+6dre.ca.gov+6.

What are California SB and AB Bills?

Senate Bills (SB) and Assembly Bills (AB) are legislative proposals introduced annually in California to address housing, zoning, and real estate development issues. SB bills originate in the State Senate; AB bills come from the State Assembly. These bills regularly impact homeowners, developers, and renters by modifying rules for zoning, construction, and tenant rights. Keep up-to-date with the latest California housing and real estate laws below.