7 Ways Landlords Illegally Violate Tenant Rights That Most Renters Accept

A diagram of a lease agreement where illegal clauses are crossed out and replaced with the correct state law.
This lease agreement cross-section highlights illegal clauses that are unenforceable under state laws protecting tenant rights.

7. Including Unenforceable Clauses in Your Lease Agreement

Many renters assume that because they signed a lease agreement, every single clause within that document is legally binding. Property managers rely heavily on this misconception. They frequently draft leases filled with illegal, unenforceable clauses designed to intimidate you into waiving your rights.

Common illegal lease clauses include provisions stating that the landlord is not liable for personal injuries caused by their own negligence, clauses forcing the tenant to pay all of the landlord’s attorney fees in any dispute regardless of who wins, or clauses demanding that the tenant handle all major structural repairs. Another frequent violation is an “as-is” clause, where the landlord attempts to rent a dilapidated apartment while officially waiving their duty to maintain habitability.

When a lease contains an illegal clause, that specific section of the contract is void and unenforceable in a court of law. In some jurisdictions, including deliberately deceptive and illegal clauses in a residential lease can invalidate the entire contract. Always read your lease carefully, but do not let intimidating legal jargon prevent you from seeking a safe, habitable living environment. Knowing the actual renters rights landlords break allows you to confidently ignore void contractual demands.

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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.

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