SoCal's ADU boom has drawn a wave of contractor scams. Here are the red flags that give a scammer away — and the California law that puts the homeowner in control before a single dollar changes hands.
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Southern California is a documented ADU-scam hotspot. The most common scam works like this: a contractor demands a large up-front "deposit," "material reservation," or "lumber-lock" fee, then stalls or disappears. California law caps any contractor's down payment at $1,000 — or 10% of the contract, whichever is less — so an oversized deposit demand is itself the red flag, and the law is your shield. Always verify the license for free at the CSLB before you sign anything.
The short version: demand has outrun vetting. The Los Angeles metro accounts for roughly 60% of all ADU activity in California, and when that many homeowners are racing to add a backyard unit, opportunists follow the money. There are far more people who want an ADU built than there are honest, licensed crews to build them — and that gap is exactly where ADU scams take root.
This isn't hypothetical. One California ADU company, Anchored Tiny Homes, took deposits from more than 450 homeowners across the state before going bankrupt — leaving families out their savings with nothing built. NBC's investigation documented the pattern plainly: people paid real money to a company that took it and never finished the work. You can read the reporting here: NBC Bay Area — How a California law left ADU buyers scammed.
The lesson is not "all ADU builders are crooks" — most are honest pros. The lesson is that the volume of demand has made it easy for bad actors to hide in the crowd, and the only reliable defense is to verify before you trust. That starts with knowing the one trick scammers rely on most.
The single most common ADU contractor scam in Southern California is the disguised deposit. A scammer rarely says "give me a huge deposit." Instead they dress it up in a fee that sounds legitimate:
These all share one job: to get a large sum of your money out the door before any real work is done. And here's what most homeowners don't know — they are almost always illegal.
California law caps a contractor's down payment at $1,000 OR 10% of the total contract price, whichever is LESS (CSLB / Business & Professions Code §7159.5). Because an ADU contract is essentially always far more than $10,000, the "10%" branch never wins — which means the legal maximum a contractor can ask for up front on virtually any ADU is $1,000. A "material reservation fee" of $25,000 isn't a fee. It's an illegal down payment, and a giant red flag.
The CSLB spelled this out directly in a 2024 advisory aimed at ADU homeowners. The official source: CSLB — ADU payment rules (PDF).
It does not matter what they call it. Material reservation, lumber-lock, onboarding, "to hold your spot in the schedule" — if a contractor wants more than $1,000 (or 10% of the contract, whichever is less) before work begins, they are either breaking California law or testing whether you know it. Either way, that's your cue to stop and verify, not to sign.
You don't need to be an expert to spot a scam — you need a checklist. If a contractor trips any of these ADU contractor red flags, slow down and verify before you commit a dollar.
| Red flag | Why it's dangerous |
|---|---|
| Asks for more than $1,000 up front | Illegal under California's down-payment cap; the classic disguised-deposit scam that funds their next victim, not your build. |
| No CSLB license number on ads or contract | California law (BPC §7030.5) requires the license number on advertising and contracts. Missing it means they can't be verified — or don't want to be. |
| Unlicensed operator or "handyman" doing structural work | ADUs require structural, electrical, and plumbing work that legally needs a licensed contractor. An unlicensed crew leaves you with no bond, no recourse, and failed inspections. |
| Fake or borrowed portfolio photos | If they can't name a real, recent LA project address you could drive past, the "portfolio" may be stock images or someone else's work. |
| Pressure to sign fast / "today only" pricing | Urgency is a manipulation tactic. A real builder's price is good next week; a scammer needs your signature before you check the license. |
| Cash-only or no written contract | No paper trail means no enforceable terms, no warranty, and no way to prove what you were promised. Legitimate builders contract in writing. |
| Vague blanket "1-year warranty" | Real coverage is tiered (workmanship vs. systems vs. structural). A one-line "1-year warranty" is often a placeholder that disappears with the contractor. |
The good news: every one of these scams falls apart under a quick verification routine. Here's the whole process, start to finish, in about five minutes.
Ask for the contractor's CSLB license number before anything else. A licensed builder will rattle it off — it's on their truck, their ads, and their contract. No number, no further conversation. That's your stop sign.
Run the number through the state's free lookup and confirm the license is Active, classified Class B (general building), carries the required $25,000 bond and workers' comp, and has a clean complaint history. Check it here: CSLB — Check a License. Want the screen-by-screen walkthrough? Here's the full CSLB lookup walkthrough.
No matter what the fee is called, do not pay more than $1,000 (or 10% of the contract, whichever is less) before work begins. Citing the law calmly is also a useful filter — an honest builder agrees instantly; a scammer gets defensive.
A real LA-area builder who knows your neighborhood can answer this in about 30 seconds — it tells you whether they actually work locally and understand LADBS requirements. Vague hand-waving here often means they don't build where they claim to.
Scope, schedule, payment milestones tied to completed work, and a real warranty — all in writing. If they won't put it on paper, they're not protecting you, and they're not protecting themselves either.
The simplest protection is to start with a directory that's already done the vetting. We only list California-licensed LA builders, and we pre-screen them before you ever talk (here's our full vetting standard) — so you skip the part where you have to play detective. Run a free property check or browse our vetted builder directory to get matched with builders who've already cleared the red-flag checklist above.
See if your property qualifies — freeBefore you spend a dollar on permits, let us check your address — zoning, lot size, setbacks, overlays — and tell you straight whether an ADU is viable. If it looks good, we connect you with a vetted, California-licensed LA builder for a free on-site feasibility assessment. No cost, no commitment.
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