Your lease is a contract. It defines what you can and can't do, what the landlord can and can't do, and what happens if either of you breaks the deal. Most tenants sign without really reading it. Don't be that person. This guide breaks down lease language, explains what's enforceable, and helps you spot problematic terms before you sign.
Step 1: Understand the Core Lease Terms
These are the non-negotiables. Every lease has them:
- Rent amount and due date: How much you pay and when. Make sure this matches what you agreed to verbally. If the written amount is different, that's a problem.
- Lease start and end date: The period covered. If it says the lease runs March 1 to February 28 (12 months), you're locked in for that period.
- Security deposit amount: Usually one month's rent. The lease should specify how and when it's returned. If it says "non-refundable," that's illegal in most states—see Step 3.
- Late fees: What happens if rent is late. Typical: rent is due the 1st, and a late fee kicks in on the 6th. Watch for excessive late fees (more than 10% of rent or $50—whichever is less—is generally unreasonable).
- Utilities: Which ones you pay, which the landlord pays. Water and trash are sometimes included; electric and gas are not. Get this in writing.
- Pet policy: Whether pets are allowed, how many, weight limits, breed restrictions, and pet deposits/fees. If you have a service animal or emotional support animal, special rules apply (see Step 6).
- Occupancy limits: How many people can live there. Most leases cap it at 2-3 adults, though exceptions apply for families. Make sure this matches your situation.
Step 2: Know What's Legal vs Illegal in Your Lease
Landlords can include all sorts of things in leases, but not everything is enforceable. Here are common illegal or unenforceable clauses:
- Waiving your right to a habitable home: ILLEGAL. A lease can't say "landlord is not responsible for repairs" or "tenant waives implied warranty of habitability." Your landlord MUST keep the unit livable (heat, hot water, functional kitchen/bathroom, no pest infestations, etc.).
- Non-refundable security deposit: ILLEGAL in most states. A security deposit must be refundable. It can be used for unpaid rent or damages, but it's not a fee. If your lease says otherwise, cross it out or don't sign.
- Waiving right to legal notice before eviction: ILLEGAL. No matter what the lease says, a landlord must follow formal eviction procedures. A clause saying "I can kick you out without notice" has zero legal weight.
- Waiving right to withhold rent for repairs: LEGALLY GRAY, varies by state. Some states allow you to withhold rent if the landlord doesn't make necessary repairs. A lease clause prohibiting this is enforceable in some states, not others. Know your state's law.
- Blanket ban on calling police: ILLEGAL. You have the right to call 911 or police. A clause forbidding this is unenforceable.
- Right to enter without notice: LEGALLY GRAY. Landlords have a right to enter for repairs, inspections, or emergencies, but most states require 24-48 hours' notice. A clause saying "landlord can enter anytime" may not be enforceable in your state.
- Holding you liable for acts of other tenants or guests: PARTIALLY UNENFORCEABLE. You're responsible for your own conduct and guests you invite, but not random tenants in other units.
Check your state's tenant laws (search "[your state] tenant rights law"). Laws vary widely. What's illegal in California might be enforceable in Texas.
Step 3: Red Flags to Watch For
Some lease terms aren't illegal but are unfair or problematic. Watch for:
- Excessive late fees: If rent is $1,000 and the late fee is $500, that's punitive. Most states say late fees must be reasonable (10% or less).
- Unclear utility costs: If the lease is vague about utilities ("utilities included" or "tenant responsible for utilities"), ask for specifics. Get it in writing which utilities are included and which aren't.
- Unreasonable repair liability: If the lease says you're responsible for all repairs, that's probably unenforceable. Normal wear and tear is the landlord's responsibility. But if you damage something, you pay.
- Automatic lease renewal with early termination fees: Some leases auto-renew and charge heavy penalties if you don't provide 60+ days' notice to end the lease. Understand this before signing.
- Right to change terms mid-lease: Some leases include language like "landlord may increase rent with 30 days' notice." In most states, the landlord can't raise rent mid-lease, but read carefully.
- Excessive pet fees or monthly pet rent: Some landlords charge $50-500 per pet upfront PLUS $20-50/month per pet. Legally, yes, but are you comfortable with it?
- Vague language about "conduct" or "nuisance": Leases sometimes say you can't create a "nuisance" without defining it. What counts? Get specifics about noise, guests, or activity they're concerned about.
Step 4: Security Deposit Rules You Must Know
Security deposits are one of the biggest sources of conflict between landlords and tenants. Know these rules:
- It's refundable: Unless you live in a place with non-refundable fees (rare and often illegal), your security deposit comes back after you move out. Landlords can deduct for unpaid rent and damage, but the rest must be returned.
- How much can be charged: Most states cap security deposits at one month's rent. Some allow one and a half months for furnished units or places with pets. Check your state's law.
- How it's held: Many states require landlords to hold deposits in a separate, interest-bearing account. Some require they return interest to you. This varies by state.
- Timeline for return: Most states require landlords to return deposits within 30-45 days of move-out. Some require itemized deductions; others don't. Know your state's rules.
- What counts as damage: Landlords can deduct for damage you caused. But not for normal wear and tear (see Step 6 on move-out for details).
- If the landlord doesn't return it: In most states, you can sue for the deposit amount plus penalties (sometimes 2-3x the deposit). This is taken seriously by courts.
Tip: Take photos of the unit on move-in and send them to the landlord. Take photos on move-out. This protects both of you.
Step 5: Lease Termination and Breaking Your Lease
Life happens. You might need to leave before your lease ends. Here's what you need to know:
- At-will vs fixed-term leases: A fixed-term lease (e.g., 12 months) means you're committed for that period. Month-to-month is more flexible. Know which you have.
- Notice to end the lease: Most leases require 30-60 days' notice to end at the end of the lease term. If you don't provide notice, the lease usually auto-renews month-to-month.
- Early termination penalties: If you break your lease early, you might owe a penalty (sometimes one month's rent, sometimes more). Some leases say you owe all remaining rent. Check your lease.
- You can break a lease if the landlord violates it: If the unit becomes uninhabitable or the landlord harasses you, you might have legal grounds to break the lease without penalty. This varies by state.
- Constructive eviction: If the landlord creates uninhabitable conditions (no heat, flooding, pest infestations) and doesn't fix them, you may be able to leave without penalty. Document everything.
- Military or domestic violence exceptions: Some states allow military members and domestic violence survivors to break leases early without penalty. Check if this applies to you.
If you need to break your lease, first check if you qualify for an exception. If not, try negotiating with the landlord—paying one month's rent to end early is cheaper than fighting in court.
Step 6: Subletting, Roommates, and Occupancy Rules
What if you want to sublet to someone else or add a roommate? Here's what the lease typically says:
- Subletting: Most leases require landlord approval to sublet. Some prohibit it entirely. If you want to sublet, get written permission. Subletting without permission can be grounds for eviction.
- Adding a roommate: If you signed the lease alone, adding someone requires the landlord's permission and usually a lease amendment. Don't just let someone move in; the landlord can evict both of you.
- Occupancy limits: Leases specify how many people can live there. This is usually 2-3 adults. Adding people beyond this can violate the lease.
- Temporary guests: You can have guests stay short-term (days/weeks). Months-long guests cross into occupancy issues. Know your lease's definition.
- Reasonable accommodation requests: If you need a roommate for disability or accessibility reasons, the landlord must allow it in most cases, even if the lease prohibits it. See our reasonable accommodation guide.
- Domestic partners or spouses: If someone moves in with you and you're married or in a domestic partnership, the landlord typically must recognize them as a co-tenant.
Step 7: Month-to-Month vs Fixed-Term Leases
These have very different legal implications:
- Fixed-term lease (e.g., 12 months): You commit for that period. Rent can't be raised mid-lease (in most states). Landlord can't force you out for no reason. At the end, you're free to leave or renew.
- Month-to-month lease: You pay month-to-month, no long-term commitment. Either you or the landlord can end it with 30-60 days' notice (check your state's law). Landlord can raise rent or decide not to renew with proper notice.
- Which is better for you? Fixed-term is better if you want stability. Month-to-month is better if you might need to leave. But fixed-term protects you from surprise rent hikes.
- Auto-renewal clauses: Some fixed-term leases automatically convert to month-to-month after the term ends unless you provide notice. Make sure you understand when you need to give notice to leave.
Step 8: Lease Renewal and Rent Increases
When your lease is about to end, the landlord may propose a renewal with changes:
- Rent increases: At renewal, the landlord can raise rent (within limits set by local law). Some places cap increases at inflation + 3%; others don't. Know your local rules.
- Rent control: In some cities (San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles), rent increases are limited by law. In others, there's no limit. Check your city's ordinances.
- Just-cause eviction: Some states and cities require the landlord to have a legal reason to evict (nonpayment, lease violation, no-cause eviction is allowed after X years). Know if this applies to you.
- Renewal terms may change: The landlord might propose changes to terms (pet policy, parking, utilities) at renewal. You can negotiate these.
- If you don't want to renew: Provide written notice by the deadline in your lease (usually 30-60 days before the lease ends). Do this even if you think the landlord knows; written notice protects you.
Key Resources
State Tenant Rights: LawHelp.org (search your state for detailed tenant rights)
CFPB Renter Resources: CFPB Renting Guide
Lease Review: Get a free or low-cost legal aid clinic to review your lease before signing
Local Tenant Unions: Search for tenant advocacy groups in your city