Getting Your Security Deposit Back: Your Rights State by State

My landlord won't return my deposit. Housing Rights laws have a federal baseline that applies everywhere, but each state layers on its own statute, deadlines, and remedies. Pick your state below for the specific rules — or read the federal overview first.

Security Deposits: the federal baseline

  • Metric: law is one of the few places where tenants almost always have the upper hand — if they know the rules
  • Metric: law (typically
  • Metric: 14

Security deposit law is one of the few places where tenants almost always have the upper hand — if they know the rules. When you move out, your landlord has to return your deposit within a specific window set by state law (typically 14 to 30 days), and they can only deduct for unpaid rent, damage beyond normal wear and tear, or cleaning costs specifically allowed by your lease.

The phrase "normal wear and tear" is the entire game. Scuffed floors, faded paint, light carpet wear, small nail holes — that's wear and tear, and your landlord can't bill you for it. Pet stains, holes in drywall, broken tiles, and burn marks are damage, and those they can deduct. Most states require an itemized list of every deduction along with receipts; if your landlord skips the list or misses the deadline, many states impose 2× or 3× the deposit as a penalty even for legitimate damage.

When does it apply?

This right applies when:

  • You paid a security deposit at the start of your tenancy
  • You are moving out (whether your lease ended, you gave notice, or you were evicted)
  • Your landlord deducts money from your deposit or refuses to return it

Common misconceptions:

  • "My landlord can keep the deposit for any reason" — No. Deductions must be for specific, documented damages beyond normal wear and tear.
  • "Normal wear and tear means the place should look new" — No. Landlords cannot charge for gradual deterioration from normal use: paint fading, carpet wearing down, minor scuffs.
  • "I can use my security deposit as last month's rent" — Not unless your lease specifically allows it. Withholding rent and claiming "use my deposit" can lead to eviction for nonpayment.

What to Do If Your Landlord Won't Return Your Deposit

  • Metric: 1

Step 1: Photograph everything before you leave. Every room, every wall, every appliance, time-stamped. Video walkthroughs are even better. This is the single most valuable evidence in any deposit dispute.

Step 2: Do a joint walkthrough if you can. Many states give you the right to be present at move-out inspection. Get the landlord to sign off on the condition or write down any disputes in real time.

Step 3: Provide a forwarding address in writing. The clock for return only starts when the landlord knows where to send the deposit. No address, no statutory deadline running.

Step 4: Send a demand letter by certified mail. Cite your state's deadline, the amount owed, and the penalty available if they don't return it. A surprising number of landlords cut a check at this stage to avoid the 2–3× exposure.

Step 5: File in small claims. Filing fees are usually under $100 and you don't need a lawyer. Many states let you recover 2–3× the deposit amount plus court costs and attorney fees if you have one.

Pick your state for the local rules

State law often controls the deadline, the penalty, and which agency hears the complaint. Choose yours to see the deep state-specific guide for security deposits.

What should you NOT do?

Don't leave without documenting. Without move-out photos, it's your word against the landlord's — and judges have heard a lot of those cases.

Don't skip the demand letter. Courts want to see you tried to resolve it first. The certified-mail receipt also locks in the date the landlord was put on notice.

Don't sit on the claim. Statutes of limitations for deposit suits run 2–6 years depending on state. The longer you wait, the harder the evidence is to find.

Don't cash a partial refund check without writing "under protest" on it. Some states treat a partial check as accord and satisfaction — meaning you've accepted it as full payment. Note in writing that you're still disputing the rest.

You came here to know your rights — help someone else know theirs.

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