Variations in speleothem calcium isotope ratios (δ44Ca) are thought to be uniquely controlled by prior carbonate precipitation (PCP) above a drip site and, when calibrated with modern data, show promise as a semi-quantitative proxy for paleorainfall. However, few monitoring studies have focused on δ44Ca in modern cave systems. We present a multi-year comparative study of δ44Ca, carbon isotopes (δ13C), and trace elemental ratios from cave drip waters, modern calcite, and host rocks from two cave systems in California - White Moon Cave (WMC) and Lake Shasta Caverns (LSC). Drip water and calcite δ44Ca from both caves indicate PCP-driven enrichment, and we use a simple Rayleigh fractionation model to quantify PCP variability over the monitoring period. Modern calcite δ44Ca from deeper sites at WMC display a larger PCP signal than shallower sites, indicating that longer flow paths allow for more PCP under the same hydroclimate conditions. At both WMC and LSC, we observe an inverse relationship between PCP and rainfall amounts, though this relationship is variable across individual drip sites. Our modeled data suggest that WMC experiences ~20% more PCP than LSC, consistent with the fact that WMC receives less annual rainfall. This work supports speleothem δ44Ca as an independent constraint on PCP that can aid in the interpretation of other hydrologically sensitive proxies and provide quantitative estimates of paleorainfall. Additional, long-term monitoring studies from a variety of climate settings will be key for understanding δ44Ca variability in cave systems more fully and better constraining the relationship between PCP and rainfall.