Caruso was a real-estate lawyer in the corporate finance department at Finley Kumble, but in 1990, he quit law to develop retail and residential properties full-time. In 1987, he founded Caruso, a company that develops, owns and manages properties such as The Grove at Farmers Market in Los Angeles, the Americana at Brand in Glendale, the Commons at Calabasas, the Promenade at Westlake, The Lakes at Thousands Oaks, 8500 Burton Way, Waterside Marina Del Rey, Palisades Village in Pacific Palisades, and the Rosewood Miramar Beach in Santa Barbara. During his tenure as CEO of Caruso, the company unsuccessfully engaged in oppressive practices designed to chill free speech regarding the Armenian Genocide at The Americana in Glendale, CA on two occasions. He has lectured on real estate issues at the Kennedy School of Public Administration at Harvard University, the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy and the Milken Institute Global Conference. Caruso participates annually as a guest panelist for the International Council of Shopping Centers.
Caruso founded the Caruso Family Foundation, which focuses on organizations that improve the lives of children in need of healthcare and education. In 2013, the Foundation pledged $5 million to Operation Progress, a Watts-based non-profit founded by Los Angeles Police Department officers, which will guide more than 200 students from elementary school through college graduation. The pledge creates a new "ecosystem of opportunity" led by Operation Progress in collaboration with three area Catholic schools, South Central Scholars, Helping Young People Excel, and STRIVE. Caruso serves on the board of Para Los Niños, a nonprofit family and child welfare agency in South Los Angeles. The organization dedicated its Skid Row facility as the Tina and Rick Caruso Child Development Center. The Caruso Catholic Center and Our Savior Parish Church on the USC campus was endowed by and named after Caruso following his contribution of $9 million. His daughter, Gianna "Gigi", was born with hearing loss and was treated at USC's Keck School of Medicine. In 2015, Caruso and his wife Tina donated a further $25 million to USC, to endow and name the USC Tina and Rick Caruso Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. He sits on the board of the National Institute of Transplantation and is on the Board of St. John's Health Center and The California Medical Center Foundation. In 1995, Caruso was named Alumnus of the Year by Pepperdine School of Law. Caruso and his wife, Tina, established the Caruso Loan Forgiveness Fund which covers the law school loan payments for ten years for low-income and other underserved students. Caruso was named by the Los Angeles Business Journal as "Developer of the Year" and its 2012 Ernst & Young LLP Master Entrepreneur of the Year. In October 2019, Caruso donated $50 million to Pepperdine School of Law, resulting in a name change to the Pepperdine Caruso School of Law. This gift will go to historically underrepresented students, as well as to law students pursuing public interest law.
Political influence
In 2015, Caruso funded a voter initiative to bypass local planning laws and the California Environmental Quality Act in order to build an outdoor mall in Carlsbad, CA. That initiative passed but a subsequent referendum overturned it and required a public vote – Measure A. The measure failed and the mall construction was blocked. All together, Caruso spent $12 million in less than a year on getting the project approved. This spending included television ads, mailers, and consulting services. In 2016, the L.A. Times reported that Caruso, his affiliates and family, had given more than $476,000 to L.A. city officials over the past five years; during this time Los Angeles City Hall approved numerous building projects. Caruso has floated the idea of a run for mayor in multiple campaign cycles. Though he considered a 2009 run, he ultimately decided against it before the election. In 2020, Caruso expressed interest in running in the 2022 Los Angeles mayoral election. This consideration was made public during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Caruso was chosen to assist the White House in facilitating America's future recovery from the disease. He gave multiple interviews during this time on prioritizing small businesses during the recovery.
Caruso is the chairman of the board of trustees at his alma mater, the University of Southern California. During his tenure as chairman, Marshall School of Business dean James G. Ellis was removed and a settlement was reached in the sexual abuse scandal involving campus gynecologistGeorge Tyndall. Olivia Jade Giannulli, one of the USC students involved in the federal indictments regarding USC admissions, was aboard Caruso's $100 million yacht, Invictus, in the Bahamas at the time the scandal broke. Giannulli is daughter of actress Lori Loughlin and a friend of Caruso's daughter, Gianna. Gianna Caruso, like her other siblings, was accepted to USC during a period in which her father donated millions of dollars to the university.
Personal life
He is married to Tina Caruso; they have four children, Alex, Gregory, Justin, and Gianna. They live in Brentwood, a neighborhood of Los Angeles. All four children have attended the University of Southern California. Caruso has donated millions of dollars to the school. Caruso, through a trust, paid for a $4.4 million mansion in Pacific Palisades for his son Justin. Caruso owns a SuperYacht named Invictus.