Security Deposit Laws by State: What Landlords Need to Know
LeasePlex Team · June 22, 2026
Security deposits are one of the biggest legal landmines for small landlords. Not because the rules are complicated — they're actually pretty straightforward — but because they vary completely by state, and most DIY landlords don't know their state's specific rules until something goes wrong.
The two most common mistakes: collecting more than the legal maximum (which exposes you to a lawsuit before the tenant even moves in) and returning the deposit too late (which can trigger automatic penalties of 2–3× the deposit amount in most states). Both are entirely avoidable if you know the rules upfront.
There's No Federal Security Deposit Law
This surprises a lot of landlords. There is no federal statute governing security deposit limits, return deadlines, or how deposits must be held. The federal government leaves this entirely to the states — which means you need to know your specific state's landlord-tenant statute, not a national rule.
Some states are strict: they cap deposits at one month's rent, require a separate escrow account, and hand tenants triple damages if you miss the return window. Others are much more landlord-friendly with no statutory maximum and a 45-day return window. The gap between states is significant enough that what's fine in one state could be illegal in another.
The Three Things Every State Regulates
Even though the specifics vary, virtually every state's landlord-tenant law covers the same three areas:
1. Maximum deposit amount. Most states cap the security deposit at 1–2 months' rent. A handful have no statutory limit, but even in those states, charging an excessive deposit can raise fair housing concerns. Know your cap before you write the lease.
2. Return deadline. After move-out, you typically have 14–45 days to return the deposit (or the balance after deductions). This clock usually starts at move-out or when the tenant provides a forwarding address — whichever is later, depending on the state. Missing this deadline is the single most common way landlords lose deposit disputes.
3. Itemized deductions requirement. In most states, if you're keeping any portion of the deposit, you must provide a written, itemized list of deductions along with receipts or repair invoices. A vague “cleaning and damages” line item won't hold up. Courts consistently side with tenants when landlords can't produce documentation.
Security Deposit Laws by State — Reference Table
The table below covers all 50 states and Washington, D.C. Use it as a starting point — laws change, and you should always verify against your state's current landlord-tenant statute before acting.
| State | Max Deposit | Return Deadline | Non-Compliance Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | No limit | 35 days | Up to 2× deposit |
| Alaska | 2 months' rent | 14 days | 2× deposit |
| Arizona | 1.5 months' rent | 14 days | 2× deposit |
| Arkansas | 2 months' rent | 60 days | Up to 2× deposit |
| California | 2 months' rent (unfurnished); 3 months' (furnished) | 21 days | 2× deposit + actual damages |
| Colorado | No limit | 30 days (up to 60 if stated in lease) | 3× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Connecticut | 2 months' rent | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Delaware | 1 month's rent (after 1 year) | 20 days | 2× deposit |
| Washington D.C. | No limit | 45 days | 3× deposit |
| Florida | No limit | 15–60 days (depends on deductions) | Forfeit of right to deduct |
| Georgia | No limit | 30 days | 3× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Hawaii | 1 month's rent | 14 days | 2× deposit |
| Idaho | No limit | 21 days (or per lease, up to 30) | Up to 3× deposit |
| Illinois | No limit | 30 days (45 if itemizing) | 2× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Indiana | No limit | 45 days | Entire deposit + attorney's fees |
| Iowa | 2 months' rent | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Kansas | 1 month's rent (unfurnished); 1.5 months' (furnished) | 30 days | 1.5× deposit |
| Kentucky | No limit | 30–60 days | 2× deposit |
| Louisiana | No limit | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Maine | 2 months' rent | 21 days (month-to-month: 30 days) | 2× deposit |
| Maryland | 2 months' rent | 45 days | 3× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Massachusetts | 1 month's rent | 30 days | 3× deposit + attorney's fees + interest |
| Michigan | 1.5 months' rent | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Minnesota | No limit | 21 days | 2× deposit + $500 punitive damages |
| Mississippi | No limit | 45 days | Up to 2× deposit |
| Missouri | 2 months' rent | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Montana | No limit | 10 days (no deductions); 30 days (with deductions) | Damages + attorney's fees |
| Nebraska | 1.25 months' rent | 14 days | 2× deposit |
| Nevada | 3 months' rent | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| New Hampshire | 1 month's rent (or $100, whichever is greater) | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| New Jersey | 1.5 months' rent | 30 days (5 days if fire/flood) | 2× deposit |
| New Mexico | 1 month's rent (≤1 year lease); no limit (>1 year) | 30 days | 2× deposit + attorney's fees |
| New York | 1 month's rent (most units) | 14 days | 2× deposit |
| North Carolina | 2 months' rent (monthly tenancy: 1.5 months') | 30 days | Loss of right to deduct |
| North Dakota | 1 month's rent | 30 days | 3× deposit |
| Ohio | No limit | 30 days | 2× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Oklahoma | No limit | 45 days | 2× deposit |
| Oregon | No limit | 31 days | 2× deposit |
| Pennsylvania | 2 months' rent (1st year); 1 month's (after) | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Rhode Island | 1 month's rent | 20 days | 2× deposit |
| South Carolina | No limit | 30 days | 3× deposit + attorney's fees |
| South Dakota | 1 month's rent | 14 days (no deductions); 45 days (with deductions) | Entire deposit + damages |
| Tennessee | No limit | 30 days | 2× deposit |
| Texas | No limit | 30 days | 3× deposit + $100 + attorney's fees |
| Utah | No limit | 30 days | 3× deposit |
| Vermont | No limit | 14 days | 2× deposit + attorney's fees |
| Virginia | 2 months' rent | 45 days | Entire deposit + attorney's fees |
| Washington | No limit | 21 days | 2× deposit |
| West Virginia | No limit | 60 days | Damages |
| Wisconsin | No limit | 21 days | 2× deposit |
| Wyoming | No limit | 30 days (15 days if no deductions) | Damages |
Laws change. Verify these figures with your state's current landlord-tenant statute or an attorney before collecting or returning any deposit.
Still Managing Rent in a Spreadsheet?
LeasePlex automates rent collection, tracks expenses, and keeps you compliant — built for landlords with 2–10 properties.
Top 5 Landlord Mistakes with Security Deposits
- Holding the deposit too long. The most expensive mistake. In most states, missing the return deadline forfeits your right to make any deductions at all — and triggers automatic penalties. Set a calendar reminder the day a tenant gives notice.
- No itemized deduction list. Courts won't let you keep money for “general cleaning” without receipts. Every deduction needs a line item with the specific damage, the cost to repair it, and supporting documentation (photos, invoices). If you can't produce it, you don't get to keep the money.
- Commingling with operating funds. Treating the security deposit like extra rent money — depositing it into your regular account and spending it — is a violation in many states. Some states explicitly require deposits to be held in a separate, interest-bearing account. Even where it's not legally mandated, mixing funds creates accounting nightmares and legal exposure.
- Not documenting move-in and move-out condition. Without a move-in inspection report (photos, written checklist, tenant signature), you have no baseline to compare against at move-out. A tenant who disputes a deduction will win if you can't prove the damage wasn't pre-existing. Do a walkthrough at both ends of the tenancy and keep dated photo documentation.
- Collecting more than the legal maximum. Some states cap deposits at one month's rent. If you collect two months because “it seemed fine,” you're exposed to a claim before the tenancy even starts. Check the limit for your state before you write the number into the lease.
How LeasePlex Helps
LeasePlex gives small landlords a single place to track deposit amounts, move-in and move-out dates, and all the documentation that would be needed in a dispute — without spreadsheets. The expense tracking and lease management features make it easy to log deductions with receipts attached, so you always have an itemized paper trail ready if a tenant asks questions.
The Bottom Line
Security deposit compliance comes down to three things: know your state's limit before you collect, document everything at move-in and move-out, and return the deposit (with an itemized accounting if needed) within your state's deadline. Miss any one of those, and the penalty is almost always more expensive than whatever you were trying to keep.
This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Security deposit laws change — verify current rules with your state's landlord-tenant statute or an attorney.