Habitability Standards
Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.
What is this right?
Your landlord must provide a rental unit that is safe and livable. This is called the implied warranty of habitability. It means working plumbing, heat, electricity, structural safety, and freedom from serious health hazards like mold, lead paint, or pest infestations.
If your rental unit has serious problems that affect your health or safety, your landlord has a legal obligation to fix them. You don't have to live in unsafe conditions just because you signed a lease.
When does it apply?
This right applies when:
- Your rental unit has conditions that threaten your health or safety
- Utilities (heat, water, electricity) are not functioning
- There are structural problems (leaking roof, broken windows, faulty wiring)
- There are pest infestations, mold, lead paint hazards, or other environmental dangers
Common misconceptions:
- "My lease says the landlord isn't responsible for repairs" — In most states, a landlord cannot waive the implied warranty of habitability in a lease. Such clauses are unenforceable.
- "Minor problems mean I can withhold rent" — Habitability issues must be serious. A dripping faucet or cosmetic damage usually doesn't qualify. Major problems like no heat, sewage backup, or dangerous wiring do.
- "If I caused the problem, the landlord doesn't have to fix it" — Correct. The warranty covers landlord responsibilities, not tenant-caused damage.
What should you do?
Step 1: Notify your landlord in writing. Describe the problem in detail, include photos, and request a repair by a specific date. Send via email and certified mail.
Step 2: If the landlord doesn't respond, contact your local housing code enforcement or building inspector. They can inspect the unit and order the landlord to make repairs.
Step 3: Check if your state allows "repair and deduct" — where you hire someone to fix the problem and deduct the cost from rent. States that allow this have specific procedures you must follow.
Step 4: If conditions are truly dangerous (no heat in winter, gas leak, sewage), you may be able to terminate the lease based on "constructive eviction." Consult a tenant rights attorney first.
Step 5: Document everything: photos, videos, written complaints, repair requests, inspector reports. These are critical if you need to go to court.
What should you NOT do?
Don't withhold rent without following your state's legal process. Many states require you to put the rent in escrow with the court rather than simply not paying.
Don't make major repairs without written notice to the landlord first. Give them a chance to fix it — and follow your state's repair-and-deduct rules exactly.
Don't vacate without documentation. If you leave due to habitability issues, document everything to protect yourself from lease-breaking penalties.
Don't ignore lead paint warnings. If you have children under 6 and suspect lead paint, contact your local health department immediately. Lead exposure in children is a medical emergency.
How Massachusetts differs from federal law
Massachusetts requires landlords to maintain rental units in habitable condition under the State Sanitary Code and state law:
- The MA State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410) sets detailed minimum standards for housing
- Required: working heat (between Sept 15 and June 15, minimum 68°F during day, 64°F at night), hot water (minimum 110°F), electricity, plumbing, and structural integrity
- Landlords must keep premises free from insect and rodent infestations
- MA allows tenants to withhold rent if conditions violate the sanitary code and the tenant is not at fault
- Tenants may also repair and deduct — make necessary repairs and deduct the cost from rent (up to 4 months' rent)
- Rent abatement is available from courts for periods where the unit was uninhabitable
Additional Steps in Massachusetts
Notify your landlord in writing of needed repairs. Contact your local Board of Health to request an inspection. File a complaint with the MA Attorney General's office. Contact Massachusetts Legal Aid at masslegalhelp.org or call (617) 603-1700.
Relevant Law: 105 CMR 410 (State Sanitary Code). MGL c. 111, § 127A et seq. MGL c. 239, § 8A (warranty of habitability defense in eviction).
Legal Resources
We may earn a commission if you use these services — at no extra cost to you. This supports our mission to make legal information free for everyone.