Most of the news coverage on the LA County 82°F cooling mandate has gotten the timeline wrong. Owners have been told they need to install air conditioning immediately. They do not. The phased compliance schedule gives most owners until 2027 and the smallest owners until 2032.
What the Mandate Actually Requires
The Los Angeles County Maximum Indoor Air Temperature Standard requires rental property owners in unincorporated LA County to maintain habitable interior temperatures during hot weather.
- Most landlords (more than 10 units) must meet the 82°F standard in all habitable rooms by 2027.
- Small landlords (10 or fewer units) must have at least one habitable room compliant by 2027 and all habitable rooms compliant by 2032.
- Owners must provide a means of cooling.
- The standard does not require central air conditioning.
The Phased Enforcement Timeline
Compliance Schedule
- January 1, 2027: Most landlords must have all habitable rooms at 82°F or below.
- January 1, 2032: Small landlords (10 or fewer units) must have all habitable rooms compliant.
The small-owner phasing is the part most news coverage has missed entirely. Small owners are not exempt from the 2027 deadline. They have a reduced 2027 obligation and a 2032 deadline for full compliance.
Who the Mandate Applies To
The mandate applies to rental property in unincorporated Los Angeles County.
- Owner-occupied single-family homes
- Properties inside the City of Los Angeles
- Properties inside separately incorporated cities
What Counts as Cooling Under the Standard
The standard is performance-based. Any system that brings required habitable rooms to 82°F or below can satisfy the requirement.
Window Air Conditioning Units
Window units are often the most affordable compliance option.
Portable Air Conditioning Units
Portable units are less efficient but may work in certain situations.
Mini-Split Heat Pump Systems
Mini-splits provide both heating and cooling while improving long-term efficiency.
Central Air Conditioning
Central AC remains the premium solution where existing ductwork is available.
Mechanical Ventilation and Shading
In limited cases, ventilation and shading strategies may help meet performance requirements.
The Hidden Cost: Electrical Capacity
Many older multifamily buildings lack sufficient electrical capacity for new cooling equipment. In some cases, service upgrades cost more than the cooling systems themselves.
How to Plan for the Deadline
Owners with more than 10 units should already be evaluating equipment options, electrical capacity, permits, and contractor schedules.
Owners with 10 or fewer units should align cooling improvements with other planned capital projects whenever possible.
Plan, Do Not Panic
The cooling mandate is real. The deadlines are real. The owners best positioned for compliance are the ones planning equipment, electrical capacity, and tenant access now rather than waiting until the last minute.