See how California and New York compare on deadlines, penalties, and tenant protections - so you know exactly where you stand.
Deadline
Penalty
WNT Protection
Small Claims
Green badges highlight the rule that's better for tenants in each category.
| Category | California | New York |
|---|---|---|
| Deposit Return Deadline | 21 days | 14 daysBetter for Tenants |
| Deadline Trigger | After move-out | After move-out |
| Penalty Type | 3x depositBetter for Tenants | Full forfeiture |
| Penalty Condition | Bad faith | AutomaticBetter for Tenants |
| Itemization Required | Yes | Yes |
| Itemization Deadline | 21 days | 14 daysBetter for Tenants |
| Wear & Tear Protection | Yes | Yes |
| Small Claims Limit | $12,500Better for Tenants | $10,000 |
| Statute of Limitations | 2 yrs | 3 yrsBetter for Tenants |
| Primary Statute | California Civil Code §1950.5 | New York GOL §7-108 |
California Civil Code §1950.5
New York GOL §7-108
New York generally offers stronger tenant protections across deadline, penalty, and procedural categories. However, both states have meaningful protections and outcomes depend on your specific situation.
In California, landlords must return your security deposit within 21 days after move-out. In New York, the deadline is 14 days after move-out. Missing these deadlines can trigger penalties for the landlord.
California: Up to 3x your deposit (bad faith violation). New York: Potential full deposit recovery (automatic violation). Always document your move-out carefully to support a claim.
Yes - both California and New York prohibit landlords from deducting normal wear and tear from your security deposit. Only actual damage beyond normal use can be deducted.
Free analysis - All 50 states - 2 minutes