7 Ways Landlords Illegally Violate Tenant Rights That Most Renters Accept

A conceptual drawing of a 'Rent Increase' notice looming like a shadow over a tenant's repair request.
A hand holds a repair request while a dark shadow looms with a retaliatory rent increase notice.

6. Retaliating Against You for Asserting Your Legal Rights

You have a fundamental right to request repairs, organize a tenant union, or complain to government agencies about code violations. Retaliation occurs when a landlord punishes you for exercising these protected legal rights. Landlord retaliation represents one of the most intimidating ways property owners silence renters.

Imagine you report a severe rodent infestation to the city health department. Two weeks later, your landlord serves you with a 60-day notice that your lease will not be renewed, or they suddenly attempt to raise your rent by 40%. The law categorizes this as illegal retaliation. Many states have laws specifically outlining that if a landlord takes adverse action against a tenant within six months of the tenant exercising a legal right, courts will presume the landlord’s action is retaliatory.

Combating retaliation requires meticulous record-keeping. You must build a timeline demonstrating that your protected action (e.g., calling the housing inspector) directly preceded the landlord’s punitive action (e.g., issuing a notice to quit). Keep copies of all emails, text messages, and official reports. Retaliation serves as a robust legal defense against an eviction lawsuit and can subject the landlord to significant financial penalties.

Pages ( 8 of 11 ): « Previous 1 ... 67 8 91011Next »

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

3 thoughts on “7 Ways Landlords Illegally Violate Tenant Rights That Most Renters Accept”

  1. They’re all money hungry slum lords!! I got mold in my basement for 5 years Ive asked to be fixed. A screen door broken Ive submitted 5 work orders on and the maintenance team is too stupid to fix it! A water leak it took them 5 years to find. It had to leak into another unit for them to finally send a plumber to fix it. But they raise my rent every year!

  2. What protects a landlord from a renter who leaves a upstairs window open during the winter and freezes the heat pipe which burst and floods the floor and damage the main floor to an extent it cost $25,000 in damage and he doesn’t have a bank account and hides his cash so you can’t collect money for the damage.

related posts