If you or someone you love has experienced sexual violence, please know this: you are not alone, what happened is not your fault, and help is available whenever you are ready. The California statewide sexual assault hotline is 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), available 24 hours a day and completely confidential.
Sexual assault is one of the most misunderstood categories of crime in California. You hear the term in news stories, workplace training, and everyday conversation, but the legal definition is very specific.
That gap between how people use the word and what the law actually says leaves many survivors unsure whether what happened to them even “counts.” That confusion can delay healing, reporting, and access to justice.
How California Law Defines Sexual Assault

California law does not wrap sexual assault into one single definition. The term functions more like an umbrella, covering several specific offenses listed in the California Penal Code. Each offense has its own elements and its own penalties.
The clearest statutory reference comes from California Code of Civil Procedure ยง 340.16, which defines “sexual assault” as conduct described in Penal Code sections:
- ยง 243.4 (sexual battery)
- ยง 261 (rape)
- ยง 264.1 (rape in concert, meaning committed with another person)
- ยง 286 (sodomy)
- ยง 287 (oral copulation)
- ยง 289 (forcible sexual penetration)
Sexual assault under California law means any non-consensual sexual contact, penetration, or intercourse. That includes acts committed through force, threats, fraud, or while a person is unable to consent for any reason.ย ย
Consent Is the Heart of Every Sexual Assault Case
Every California sexual assault statute turns on the same central question: did the other person consent? Under California Penal Code ยง 261.6, consent means acting freely and voluntarily, with a real understanding of what is happening.
California law is also very clear about what consent is not. Silence is not consent. A lack of physical resistance is not consent. A current or past relationship, whether dating or marriage, is not consent. And consent given at one point can always be withdrawn.
A person cannot legally give consent if they are:
- Unconscious or asleep
- Too intoxicated to understand what is happening
- Under the legal age of consent
- Mentally incapacitated or unable to understand the nature of the act
- Coerced through threats, fraud, or abuse of authority
California also closed an old loophole in 2021 by eliminating the separate “spousal rape” category. Rape involving a spouse is now prosecuted under the same statute and carries the same penalties as any other rape. A marriage license is not, and has never been, a substitute for consent.
The Main Sexual Assault Offenses in California
Sexual Battery (Penal Code ยง 243.4)
California Penal Code ยง 243.4, which many people think of when they hear “sexual assault” in everyday conversation, makes it a crime to touch an intimate part of another person, against their will, for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or abuse.
A few things to know about how this statute works:
- “Intimate parts” include the breasts, groin, buttocks, anus, or sexual organs
- Touching counts whether it happens over clothing or on bare skin
- The offense can be charged as a misdemeanor or a felony depending on the facts
Sexual battery becomes a felony when it involves unlawful restraint of the victim, institutional settings (such as a medical facility), fraud about a “professional purpose,” or situations where the victim is unconscious or seriously disabled.ย
Rape (Penal Code ยง 261)
Under California Penal Code ยง 261, rape is defined as an act of sexual intercourse accomplished under any of the following circumstances:
- Against a person’s will through force, violence, duress, menace, or fear of bodily injury
- When the victim cannot give legal consent due to a mental or physical disability
- When the victim cannot resist because of intoxication or a controlled substance
- When the victim is unconscious or unaware of the nature of the act
- When consent is obtained through fraud, impersonation, or threats of future harm
Rape is always a felony in California. It is punishable by three, six, or eight years in state prison, with enhanced penalties when the victim is a minor or when additional aggravating factors are present.
Forcible Sexual Penetration (Penal Code ยง 289)
Penal Code ยง 289 addresses sexual penetration using a foreign object, finger, or any body part other than a sexual organ, when committed against the victim’s will or when the victim cannot consent. It is a felony punishable by three, six, or eight years in state prison.
Oral Copulation by Force (Penal Code ยง 287)
This statute covers oral copulation committed through force, threats, fraud, or against someone who cannot legally consent. Penalties depend on the victim’s age and the specific circumstances of the case.
Aggravated Sexual Assault of a Child (Penal Code ยง 269)
California reserves its harshest penalties for cases involving children. Under Penal Code ยง 269, aggravated sexual assault of a child under 14, when the perpetrator is at least seven years older, carries a sentence of 15 years to life in state prison.ย
Recent Updates to California Law
California has continued strengthening protections for survivors in ways that matter for anyone considering their legal options. A few of the most significant recent developments:
- SB 258 (effective January 1, 2026)-ย Amendments to Penal Code ยง 261 clarify how consent is evaluated when a person has a mental or physical disability, including consideration of any mitigating measures and voluntary supports in place at the time.
- AB 452 (effective January 1, 2024)-ย This law eliminated the statute of limitations for civil actions involving childhood sexual assault that occurs on or after January 1, 2024. Survivors of childhood abuse can file a lawsuit at any time, with no deadline.
- AB 2777 (the Adult Survivors Act)-ย This created a revival window allowing adult survivors whose claims had previously expired to file civil lawsuits. The window opened January 1, 2023 and closes December 31, 2026.
Sexual Assault vs. Sexual Abuse vs. Rape
These three terms get used interchangeably, but they are not the same thing under California law:
- Sexual assault is the broad umbrella covering non-consensual sexual contact, penetration, or intercourse
- Rape is a specific subcategory of sexual assault involving non-consensual sexual intercourse
- Sexual abuse usually describes a pattern of ongoing sexual misconduct, especially involving children or someone in a position of trust or authority
How Common Is Sexual Assault in California?
The scale of sexual violence in California is sobering, and it is also significantly underreported:
- According to a joint study by the UC San Diego Center on Gender Equity and Health and CALCASA (now ValorUS), roughly 86% of women and 53% of men in California reported experiencing some form of sexual assault or harassment in their lifetime, both higher than the national average
- The 2023/2024 National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey estimated that approximately 2.9 million women in California have experienced completed or attempted rape, and 2.2 million men have experienced physical sexual violence
- Nationally, the Department of Justice estimates that only about 31% of sexual assaults are reported to police. More than two out of every three assaults never enter the criminal justice system at all
Behind every number is a person. A neighbor, a coworker, a family member. Each of them deserved safety and accountability from the people who harmed them.
Criminal Cases vs. Civil Cases
In California, a single act of sexual assault can trigger two completely separate legal pathways, and it helps to understand the difference.
Civil cases are filed by the survivor against the perpetrator and, in many situations, against third parties who enabled the harm. That often includes employers, schools, religious institutions, rideshare companies, hotels, or landlords. Property owners with inadequate or negligent security measures may also share liability. The goal of a civil case is financial compensation for medical care, therapy, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other losses tied to the assault.
One important detail: civil court uses a lower standard of proof (“preponderance of the evidence”) than criminal court (“beyond a reasonable doubt”). That means a civil case can succeed even when a criminal case does not result in a conviction, or when criminal charges were never filed at all.
Both pathways can move forward at the same time, and pursuing a civil claim does not require the criminal case to go a certain way. If the assault occurred in a rideshare context, our guide on what to do after a sexual assault in an Uber or Lyft walks through the specific steps that protect a survivor’s claim against the rideshare company.ย ย
If You Are Considering Legal Action, Call WCTL
You do not have to decide anything right now. If and when you feel ready to learn about your options, an attorney who handles sexual assault cases can walk you through what a civil claim might look like for your situation, what deadlines apply, and what kinds of damages may be available. No pressure, no obligation.
At West Coast Trial Lawyers, we have represented survivors in civil cases against individuals, corporations, religious institutions, rideshare companies, schools, and other entities. Our conversations are confidential. You set the pace, and you decide whether to move forward.
If you would like to talk with someone, call (213) 927-3700 for a free, no-obligation consultation. You can also reach us through our contact form at any time.
Statewide Resources for Survivors in California
If you have experienced sexual assault, these California and national organizations provide free, confidential support:
- RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), available 24/7. Online chat available at rainn.org
- ValorUS (formerly CALCASA): Statewide coalition connecting survivors to local rape crisis centers across California
- California Victim Compensation Board (CalVCB): May cover medical bills, therapy, lost wages, and relocation costs for victims of violent crime
- California Department of Justice Victims’ Services Unit: Information on victim rights and restitution
- California’s Safe at Home Program: A confidential address program for survivors who need protection from an abuser
- Local rape crisis centers: Every county in California has at least one center offering free counseling, advocacy, and hospital accompaniment. The RAINN hotline can connect you directly to the nearest one
One thing worth knowing: sexual assault forensic exams (often called SART exams) are free in California, whether or not you choose to report to law enforcement. Hospitals are required by state law to provide these services at no cost.




