Rental deposits and tenant records
Security Deposit Basics
A security deposit is money a tenant gives a landlord at or near the start of a rental. It may be used for allowed charges after move-out, such as unpaid rent or certain damage, depending on state law, local law, the lease, and the facts. This guide explains what to save, what deductions may mean, how move-in and move-out records help, and where renters can look for official help.
What is a security deposit?
A security deposit is money a tenant pays to a landlord, usually before or when moving in. It is commonly meant to protect the landlord from certain unpaid amounts or damage, but the exact rules depend on state and local law.
A security deposit is not always the same as first month’s rent, last month’s rent, an application fee, a pet fee, a cleaning fee, or a holding deposit. The lease and local law may treat these payments differently.
- A security deposit may be refundable, depending on deductions and local rules.
- Some fees may be nonrefundable if allowed by law and clearly disclosed.
- Some places limit how much a landlord can charge.
- Some places require receipts or special deposit handling.
- Some places require an itemized deduction statement after move-out.
- Some subsidized or regulated housing may have extra rules.
Basic vocabulary
Security deposit terms to know
These definitions are general. The exact meaning can change by lease, state law, local law, and housing program.
Security deposit
A security deposit is money held by a landlord to cover certain allowed charges after or during the tenancy, depending on the lease and applicable law.
Itemized deduction
An itemized deduction is a written breakdown showing the amounts a landlord claims were taken from the deposit and the reason for each deduction.
Normal wear and tear
Normal wear and tear generally means ordinary deterioration from regular use of the rental. Damage beyond normal wear and tear may be treated differently, depending on local law and facts.
Move-in inspection
A move-in inspection is a review of the rental unit’s condition near the start of the tenancy. It may help document existing problems.
Move-out inspection
A move-out inspection is a review of the rental unit’s condition near the end of the tenancy. Some places have specific rules about move-out inspections.
Forwarding address
A forwarding address is an address where the landlord can send the deposit, deduction statement, or other move-out communication. Some states have rules about providing it.
Before move-in
What to check before paying a deposit
Before paying a deposit, try to confirm what the payment is for, whether it is refundable, who is receiving it, and whether the rental listing is real.
- Read the lease or written agreement carefully.
- Ask whether the payment is a refundable security deposit or a nonrefundable fee.
- Ask for a receipt showing the amount, date, and purpose of payment.
- Verify the landlord, property manager, or company.
- Be cautious if someone refuses to show the unit.
- Be cautious if someone demands payment by wire transfer, gift card, or cryptocurrency.
Rental scam warning
Protect your deposit from fake listings
The FTC warns that rental listing scammers may copy real listings, replace the contact information, and take money for an application fee, deposit, first month’s rent, or vacation rental charge before disappearing. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Do not send money to an unverified person just because the listing looks professional. Search the address, compare listings, verify ownership or management, and use safer payment records when possible.
Open FTC rental scam guidanceMove-in records
What to save at move-in
Move-in records can help show what the rental looked like before the tenant lived there. This can matter later if there is a deposit dispute.
Lease and deposit receipt
Save the signed lease, deposit receipt, payment confirmation, move-in charges, fee disclosures, and any written deposit terms.
Photos and videos
Take clear photos or videos of each room, walls, floors, appliances, windows, doors, locks, bathroom fixtures, cabinets, and existing damage.
Condition checklist
A condition checklist is a written record of the unit’s condition. If your landlord provides one, complete it carefully and save a copy.
Repair requests
Report existing problems in writing. Save emails, text messages, portal requests, letters, and any responses from the landlord or manager.
Utility and key records
Save records about keys, access devices, garage remotes, parking permits, utilities, meter readings, and move-in service start dates.
Communication log
Write down important conversations, including dates, names, phone numbers, repair promises, deposit discussions, and move-in condition issues.
Deposit deductions
What can landlords deduct from a security deposit?
Allowed deductions vary by state and local law. Common categories may include unpaid rent, unpaid charges allowed by the lease, cleaning costs, or repair costs for damage beyond ordinary wear and tear.
Unpaid rent
A landlord may claim unpaid rent from the deposit if allowed by the lease and law. Tenants should compare the claim with receipts, bank records, and the rent ledger.
Damage beyond ordinary use
Damage beyond ordinary use may include broken fixtures, large holes, missing items, or damage caused by misuse. The exact line between damage and normal wear varies by facts and local law.
Cleaning charges
Cleaning charges may be disputed if the tenant believes the unit was returned in the condition required by the lease and law. Photos and move-out records can matter.
Unreturned keys or devices
Some landlords may claim charges for missing keys, garage remotes, access cards, parking permits, or lock changes, depending on the lease and local rules.
Lease-related charges
Some leases list charges connected to early move-out, utilities, pet damage, unpaid fees, or other obligations. Whether a charge is allowed depends on local law and the lease.
Improper deductions
A tenant may believe a deduction is wrong, excessive, undocumented, or for ordinary wear and tear. That kind of dispute should be checked under local deposit rules.
Normal wear and tear vs damage
Normal wear and tear is ordinary aging or use of a rental over time. Damage is often something beyond ordinary use, but the legal meaning can vary. Courts, agencies, and local laws may treat facts differently.
California’s attorney general gives a state-specific example: California says landlords may use security deposits for unpaid rent, repair of tenant-caused damage beyond normal wear and tear, cleaning to return the property to move-in cleanliness, and certain furniture or personal-property replacement if authorized by the rental agreement. That is a California example, not a national rule. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
- Faded paint may be ordinary aging in some situations.
- Small nail holes may be treated differently than large holes.
- Worn carpet may be treated differently than burned or torn carpet.
- Dirty appliances may depend on condition and move-out requirements.
- Photos, move-in records, and move-out records can matter.
- Local law and facts control the actual answer.
Move-out records
What to save at move-out
Move-out records can help show the rental’s condition when the tenant left and whether deposit deductions are disputed.
Move-out photos and videos
Take clear photos or videos of each room, cleaned areas, appliances, floors, walls, fixtures, windows, doors, and any disputed conditions.
Key return proof
Save proof that keys, access cards, garage remotes, mailbox keys, parking permits, or other items were returned.
Forwarding address
Save proof that you provided a forwarding address if your local rules or lease require it for deposit return communication.
Cleaning records
Save cleaning receipts, photos, videos, and messages if cleaning condition may become an issue.
Inspection records
Save inspection reports, walk-through forms, emails, texts, repair lists, and written notes from any move-out inspection.
Deposit communication
Save itemized deduction statements, checks, electronic payments, landlord letters, emails, and messages about the deposit.
Return timing
When should a security deposit be returned?
Security deposit return deadlines vary by state and sometimes by local law. Some places require return within a certain number of days after move-out. Some places require an itemized deduction statement. Some rules depend on whether the tenant provided a forwarding address.
This page does not calculate deposit deadlines. Do not use another state’s deadline for your own situation.
- Check your state landlord-tenant law.
- Check local tenant-rights resources.
- Check whether the lease says anything about deposit return.
- Check whether a forwarding address is required.
- Save postmarks, emails, checks, and statements.
- Ask legal aid or tenant help if the deadline is unclear.
State-specific example
Why local rules matter
California, for example, says a landlord must generally return the security deposit within 21 days after move-out, except for lawful deductions, and provide an itemized statement. That rule is state-specific and should not be treated as the rule for every state. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
USA.gov points tenants to state tenant-rights resources, attorney general offices, housing agencies, and tenant-rights handbooks because landlord-tenant rules are often local or state-specific. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Open USA.gov tenant rightsDeposit disputes
What if there is a security deposit dispute?
A deposit dispute may involve unpaid rent, repair deductions, cleaning charges, missing item claims, late return, no itemized statement, or a disagreement about normal wear and tear.
Review the deduction statement
Compare each deduction with your lease, move-in records, move-out records, photos, receipts, and local deposit rules.
Gather your records
Organize the lease, deposit receipt, move-in photos, move-out photos, repair requests, payment records, communication, and inspection documents.
Write a timeline
List move-in date, deposit payment date, repair requests, move-out date, key return date, forwarding address date, and deposit communication dates.
Check official local rules
Use state tenant-rights pages, attorney general resources, housing agencies, legal aid, tenant organizations, or court self-help resources.
Consider help before taking action
Legal aid, tenant organizations, court self-help centers, or lawyers may explain local options. This site does not tell you whether to demand, sue, settle, or file.
Special housing rules
Subsidized housing and security deposits
Subsidized housing means housing connected to a government housing program, voucher, public housing authority, tax credit program, or other regulated program. These programs may have extra rules about rent, deposits, inspections, notices, and grievances.
If your rental is part of a housing program, check the lease, program paperwork, housing authority notices, tenant handbook, and official program resources.
Discrimination concern
Deposit issues and discrimination
A deposit dispute may sometimes overlap with discrimination, disability accommodation, retaliation, or unfair treatment. HUD accepts housing discrimination complaints and notes that time limits may apply. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
This page does not decide whether discrimination occurred. Save records and contact qualified help or official housing complaint resources if discrimination may be involved.
Open USA.gov housing complaintsAvoid risky mistakes
Common security deposit mistakes to avoid
Deposit disputes are often easier to understand when records are clear and deadlines are checked early.
Paying without a receipt
A receipt or written payment record can help prove the amount, date, and purpose of the payment.
Skipping move-in photos
Move-in photos can help show damage or wear that existed before the tenant moved in.
Only reporting repairs by phone
Written repair records are easier to prove than phone calls alone. Save copies of messages and requests.
Not saving move-out proof
Move-out photos, key return proof, cleaning records, and inspection records can matter later.
Assuming one state’s rule applies everywhere
Deposit limits, return deadlines, interest rules, and itemized statement rules vary by state and local law.
Paying a fake listing deposit
Rental scammers may ask for deposits before a tenant sees the property, signs a real lease, or verifies the landlord.
Reliable help
Where to get help with a security deposit issue
The right resource depends on your location, lease, deposit amount, move-out date, records, and whether the issue involves repairs, discrimination, eviction, scams, or court.
USA.gov tenant rights
USA.gov points renters to state tenant-rights resources, attorney general offices, housing agencies, and tenant-rights handbooks where available.
Open USA.gov tenant rightsUSA.gov housing complaints
USA.gov explains where tenants can look for landlord complaint options and housing discrimination complaint resources.
Open USA.gov housing complaintsLegal aid
Legal aid organizations may help eligible tenants with certain housing disputes, eviction risks, unsafe housing, or deposit-related issues.
Read legal aid basicsTenant Rights Basics
Learn broader renter concepts involving rent, repairs, notices, deposits, discrimination, and housing records.
Read tenant rights basicsEviction Notice Basics
Learn how eviction notices differ from court papers and why housing deadlines should be verified quickly.
Read eviction notice basicsFind Legal Help
Learn where to look for legal aid, court self-help centers, lawyer referral services, law libraries, and official resources.
Find legal help resourcesCommon questions
Security deposit FAQ
What is a security deposit?
A security deposit is money a tenant gives a landlord, usually before or when moving in. It may be used for allowed charges after move-out, depending on the lease and local law.
Is a security deposit always refundable?
Not always in full. A landlord may claim allowed deductions, depending on the lease, local law, and facts. Some payments may be nonrefundable fees instead of security deposits if allowed and disclosed.
What is an itemized deduction statement?
An itemized deduction statement is a written breakdown showing what amounts were taken from the deposit and why.
What is normal wear and tear?
Normal wear and tear generally means ordinary deterioration from regular use of the rental over time. The exact meaning depends on local law, facts, and the condition of the rental.
Can this site tell me if a deduction is illegal?
No. Legal Advice Basics provides general legal information only. It does not review leases, decide whether deductions are lawful, calculate deadlines, or tell you what action to take.
Where can I check security deposit rules?
Start with state tenant-rights resources, attorney general offices, local housing agencies, legal aid organizations, tenant organizations, and court self-help centers.
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