Construction Law in Long Beach, California
California construction law applies uniformly statewide — Business and Professions Code §§7000–7999 govern contractor licensing, and Civil Code §§8000–8848 govern mechanic's liens, stop payment notices, and payment bond claims. What changes from city to city is procedure: which courthouse hears a lien-foreclosure suit under Civ. Code §8460, which county recorder takes the lien recording under Civ. Code §8416, which CSLB intake office investigates a complaint under BPC §7090, and which city department issues the underlying permit.
This page collects the Long Beach-specific procedural details a contractor, subcontractor, supplier, owner, or attorney needs to act on those statutes. Substantive law links are in the topics list below.
Where Things Get Filed in Long Beach
Los Angeles County Superior Court
Los Angeles County Superior Court, Governor George Deukmejian Courthouse, 275 Magnolia Avenue, Long Beach, CA 90802
Phone: (562) 256-2300
Civil filings, including lien-foreclosure complaints under Civ. Code §8460 and breach-of-contract suits over construction work.
Los Angeles County Recorder
Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk, 12400 Imperial Highway, Norwalk, CA 90650
Phone: (800) 201-8999
Where a mechanic's lien is physically recorded under Civ. Code §8416. The recording must happen in the county where the work site sits — not necessarily where the parties live or do business.
CSLB Intake Routing for Los Angeles County
Complaint intake: CSLB Norwalk Intake & Mediation Center, 12501 East Imperial Hwy, Suite 620, Norwalk, CA 90650
Phone: (800) 321-CSLB (2752)
Nearest field office: CSLB Norwalk field office, 12501 East Imperial Hwy, Suite 610, Norwalk, CA 90650
Per CSLB policy, complaints involving job sites in Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, or Ventura counties go to the Norwalk Intake & Mediation Center. All other counties go to Sacramento.
Long Beach Permit & Building Department
Long Beach Development Services, 411 W. Ocean Boulevard, 3rd Floor, Long Beach, CA 90802
Phone: (562) 570-PMIT (7648)
Source of the underlying building-permit record, which is often dispositive on lien validity, scope of work, and licensure-classification questions under BPC §7059.
Construction Law Topics — How They Apply in Long Beach
Every California city operates under the same construction statutes. Each guide below explains the substantive law; this page covers the Long Beach procedure.
Frequently Asked Questions — Long Beach
Where do I record a mechanic's lien for a Long Beach project?
Mechanic's liens for Long Beach property record with the Los Angeles County Recorder at Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk. Recording must happen in the county where the job site sits, regardless of where the claimant or the property owner is based (Civ. Code §8416). Many California counties offer e-recording through approved submitters; verify availability with the recorder before relying on it.
Which court hears a lien-foreclosure suit on Long Beach property?
Under Civ. Code §8460, a mechanic's lien claimant has 90 days from the date of recording to file a foreclosure suit. For Long Beach property, that suit is filed in the Los Angeles County Superior Court at Los Angeles County Superior Court. Miss the 90-day window without an extension recorded under §8460(b), and the lien expires by operation of law.
How do I file a CSLB complaint about a Long Beach contractor?
For Los Angeles County job sites, CSLB complaints go to the CSLB Norwalk Intake & Mediation Center, 12501 East Imperial Hwy, Suite 620, Norwalk, CA 90650. Call (800) 321-CSLB (2752) for the consumer information line. Online complaints can be filed at cslb.ca.gov/Consumers/Filing_A_Complaint. Mailed complaints with documentation go to the address above.
What's the small-claims limit for a construction dispute in Long Beach?
California's small-claims threshold is $12,500 for individuals and $6,250 for businesses (Code of Civil Procedure §116.221). For a Long Beach dispute below that limit, an action can be filed in the Small Claims Division of the Los Angeles County Superior Court. Above that limit, the matter goes to the regular civil docket, and lien foreclosure must always be filed there regardless of dollar amount.
Does Long Beach have its own contractor licensing rules?
No — California contractor licensing is exclusively state-level under BPC §§7000–7999. Cities cannot require a separate contractor license. Long Beach can, and does, require building permits and (in some cases) a local business tax certificate, but the substantive license to perform contracting work issues from the Contractors State License Board in Sacramento.
How do I find a construction attorney in Long Beach?
The California State Bar's lawyer referral service at calbar.ca.gov screens for active, in-good-standing California attorneys. For Bay Legal PC's coverage of construction matters across Southern California, see the consultation form below — Jayson Elliott (CA Bar No. 332479) is the responsible attorney. More about Bay Legal PC's California construction practice at baylegal.com.
Legal Information Disclaimer
This page is legal information, not legal advice. Contractor Law is published by Bay Legal PC (Jayson Elliott, CA Bar No. 332479) as a California construction-law reference. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Statutes are cited as of April 2026 and may change; verify current text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov before relying on a deadline. Court, recorder, and CSLB addresses are subject to change without notice.
Last reviewed: April 2026 · Jurisdiction: California · Responsible attorney: Jayson Elliott, CA Bar No. 332479, Palo Alto, Santa Clara County
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