it depends on the type of lease you have and what it states as a proper termination period. If you are on a month-to-month tenancy, the landlord gives you 30 days notice and you move out during that 30-days and have paid a full month's rent, then no, he cannot keep your deposit. If you leave without paying the full month's rent, then yes, your landlord has the right to keep your deposit as "unpaid rent money" unless he/she is able to re-rent the apartment. If they re-rent it, then you will get some of your deposit (prorated). Hope this helps. :)
Yes, they get refunded for all the remaining months in their contract as well as 50% reimbersment for the rent they already paid.
I don't think so. Most of the time; they state when rent is due on the contract that both you and the landlord has signed. Check your contract, lease.
If your landlord accepted the security deposit from you he must return to you unless he have legal grounds to keep all or part of the security deposit. I don't think that the loss of your receipt for the security deposit is enough to allow your landlord to keep it. Thus you can sue him.
A landlord will keep a security deposit if the condition of the rental property was damaged by the occupant in some manner. The security deposit is to cover the expenses of repairing the rental property after the tenant has moved out of the premises.
Most states require the landlord to place the deposit in an interest-bearing account, protected from his creditors.
A security deposit is a refundable deposit that a tenant pays to their landlord before they move into a property As long as a tenant abides by the terms of their lease, this deposit should be returned to a tenant when their lease has expired. There are certain situations where a landlord is allowed to keep all or part of a tenant's security deposit.
A security deposit is an advanced deposit that is generally retained by the landlord during your tenancy. The landlord is obligated to return such deposit within 30 days with interest earned, if any, and/or an itemized list of expenses for which the landlord is offsetting the deposit amount (for which he wants to keep some or all of the deposit). The laws regulating such deposit varies between states under the Landlord/Tenant laws of that state.
Not automatically. If the dog damaged property and the landlord had to have it fixed, yes. If your lease states that you are not allowed to have pets, he may keep the security deposit to replace carpet, have flea exterminators, etc. when you move out. However, if neither of these is the case, then he most likely cannot keep the security deposit.
They can if the fire was the tenant's fault.
No, normally you can spend the money. If a tenant terminates a lease early the landlord can keep the security deposit and sue the tenant for loss if the unit is not re-rented by the time the lease would have expired.
Most landlords require a "pet deposit" in addition to your initial security deposit. So, if you get a cat, without permission from your landlord, then yes, they can deduct from your security deposit, the amount that you would have paid for the pet deposit. Also, they may be able to evict you, if they find out you have an unauthorized pet.
only if that is agreeable with landlord. A lease agreement without a lease is a verbal lease. Your last month's rent is not a security deposit.
A landlord is only entitled to keep all or a portion of a security deposit to cover any substantial damage to the property or to cover lost rent. They may also be entitled to a portion of the deposit if the apartment was not cleaned. If the landlord has not provided you with a list of damages or reasons as to why they're keeping all or some of your security deposit, you will need to file a small claims lawsuit against the landlord.
If your landlord won't give you your deposit or last month's rent back you need to take him to small claims court. The judge will then decide who gets what. Your landlord has the right to keep your deposit if you violate the terms of your lease, including, but not limiting to terminating it early without good cause. He doesn't have the right, however, to keep your last month's rent as a security deposit.