Rent Control and Rent Stabilization in West Virginia
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Sourced from primary statutes (U.S. Code, CFR, state compiled statutes) and official government agency guidance. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
How West Virginia differs from federal law
West Virginia preempts local rent control and is very landlord-friendly on rent regulation:
- West Virginia preempts local rent control ordinances — no city or county may enact rent caps or rent stabilization measures
- For month-to-month tenancies, landlords must provide 1 month's notice before increasing rent
- For fixed-term leases, rent cannot be increased until the lease term expires unless the lease specifically allows it
- There are no limits on rent increase amounts — landlords may raise rent by any amount with proper notice
- West Virginia has no just-cause eviction requirement — landlords can choose not to renew a lease for any lawful reason
- West Virginia is considered one of the most landlord-friendly states in the nation regarding rent regulation
Additional Steps in West Virginia
Review your lease terms regarding rent increase provisions. Ensure you receive proper written notice of any increase. Contact Legal Aid of West Virginia at (304) 343-3013 for tenant rights questions. The WV Attorney General's office can be reached at (304) 558-8986.
Relevant Law: W. Va. Code § 37-6-5 (notice requirements). W. Va. Code § 37-6-1 et seq. (landlord-tenant).
Federal baseline: Rent Control and Rent Stabilization nationwide
What is this right?
Rent control and rent stabilization cap how much your landlord can raise rent each year. There is no federal rent control — never has been, outside emergencies like World War II's Office of Price Administration. The protection only exists at the state and local level, and most states don't have it. In fact, more than 30 states have preemption laws that explicitly forbid their cities from enacting rent control.
Where it does exist, the cap is usually tied to inflation and ranges from 3% to 10% per year. Oregon led the country with a statewide cap in 2019 (SB 608, capped at 7% + CPI), and California followed months later (AB 1482, 5% + CPI, max 10%). A handful of cities run their own rent-stabilization systems — New York City's dates to 1969 and covers about a million units; San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose, and Washington D.C. all have their own variants. Most rent control laws also bring "just-cause" eviction protection along with them.
When does it apply?
Rent control may protect you when:
- You live in a state or city with rent control or rent stabilization laws
- Your landlord is raising your rent by more than the legally allowed amount
- Your unit qualifies under the applicable law (many rent control laws exempt newer buildings, owner-occupied buildings, or single-family homes)
Where rent control exists (as of 2026):
- Statewide caps: Oregon (7% + CPI, applies to buildings 15+ years old), California (5% + CPI, max 10%, applies to buildings 15+ years old)
- Local rent control: New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose, Washington D.C., and a few dozen other cities — mostly in California, New York, New Jersey, and Maryland
- Most states: No rent control at all. Over 30 states have preemption laws that prohibit cities from enacting rent control. If you are in one of these states, your landlord can raise your rent by any amount with proper notice.
Common misconceptions:
- "Rent control means my rent can never go up" — Rent control limits increases, but does not freeze rent. Annual increases are typically 3-10% depending on the jurisdiction.
- "All apartments are covered" — Most rent control laws exempt newer construction, owner-occupied small buildings, and single-family homes. Coverage varies dramatically by city.
- "My landlord can't evict me under rent control" — Rent control often includes eviction protections ("just cause" eviction), but landlords can still evict for nonpayment, lease violations, or owner move-in in most jurisdictions.
What to Do If Your Landlord Raises Your Rent Illegally
Step 1: Confirm coverage. Your unit may be exempt — most rent control laws carve out newer construction (commonly 15+ years old), owner-occupied small buildings, and single-family homes. Your local housing department or tenant rights organization can tell you whether your specific unit is covered.
Step 2: Check the math on every rent-increase notice. If you're covered, calculate the maximum allowed increase based on the CPI or the fixed cap. CA AB 1482 caps at 5% + local CPI, max 10%; OR SB 608 caps at 7% + CPI; NYC rent-stabilized rates are set annually by the Rent Guidelines Board.
Step 3: Tell your landlord in writing if the increase is over the cap. Cite the statute, explain the legal max, and state that you'll keep paying the lawful amount. A surprising number of overshoots are simply errors — the second letter often fixes them.
Step 4: File with the rent board. Cities with rent control usually have an administrative board that handles these disputes faster than court. Free or low-cost filing is the norm.
Step 5: If your state has no rent control, know what's left. Your landlord can raise rent by any amount with the required notice (usually 30–60 days), but the increase still cannot be retaliatory (against a tenant who complained) or discriminatory under the FHA.
What should you NOT do?
Don't assume you're covered. Building age, unit type, owner-occupancy, and the year the unit was built all affect coverage. Confirm before challenging.
Don't stop paying. Pay the legal amount on time and dispute the rest in writing. Nonpayment becomes its own ground for eviction regardless of how illegal the increase was.
Don't walk away from a rent-controlled unit lightly. In high-cost cities, the gap between your stabilized rate and market rate can be tens of thousands of dollars a year. Vacancy decontrol resets the rent the day you leave.
Don't take a cash buyout without counsel. "Cash for keys" offers are common from landlords who want to flip a unit. The first number is rarely the real number — and a tenant rights attorney can tell you what your tenancy is actually worth.
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