Ohio Landlord-Tenant Laws (2026): Deposits, Notice, and Tenant Rights

Ohio Landlord-Tenant Laws (2026): Deposits, Notice, and Tenant Rights
Ohio has no cap on security deposits and requires landlords to return them within 30 days of lease termination. Landlords must give tenants 24 hours of advance notice before entering the unit except in emergencies. Rent control is preempted statewide, so no Ohio city may cap rents.
Security deposits in Ohio
Ohio does not set a maximum security deposit amount. A landlord may ask for any deposit the market will bear, though excessively high deposits are uncommon in practice and courts may scrutinize extreme amounts in a dispute. The deposit belongs to the tenant while it is held, and the landlord must return it within 30 days after the tenancy ends and the tenant surrenders possession.
When returning the deposit, the landlord must send a written itemized list of any deductions along with the remaining balance. Allowed deductions include unpaid rent, physical damage beyond normal wear and tear, and other charges the lease specifically authorizes. If the landlord keeps the deposit without sending the itemized list within 30 days, the tenant may be entitled to double the wrongfully withheld amount plus attorney fees under Ohio Rev. Code 5321.16.
Ohio does not require landlords to hold deposits in a separate interest-bearing account, and tenants do not earn interest on their deposits unless the lease says otherwise.
| Rule | Ohio |
|---|---|
| Security deposit cap | No statutory cap |
| Return deadline | 30 days |
| Written itemization required | Yes |
| Interest on deposit | Not required |
When can a landlord enter? Notice rules
Ohio Rev. Code 5321.04 requires a landlord to give the tenant reasonable notice before entering a dwelling unit. The statute treats 24 hours as the standard measure of reasonable notice for non-emergency purposes. Entry must occur at reasonable times, which generally means normal business hours unless the tenant agrees otherwise.

There are limited exceptions to the notice requirement. A landlord may enter without prior notice in a genuine emergency, such as a gas leak, fire, or flooding that poses an immediate risk to persons or property. Outside of true emergencies, entering without 24 hours notice is a violation of the tenant's right to quiet enjoyment and can expose the landlord to damages.
Permitted purposes for entry include making repairs or improvements, showing the unit to prospective tenants or buyers, conducting inspections, or responding to a court order. The landlord may not use the entry right to harass the tenant.
Ending a lease: notice to vacate
To end a month-to-month tenancy in Ohio, either the landlord or the tenant must give the other party at least 30 days written notice before the next rental due date. The notice does not need a specific reason, but it must be in writing and delivered in a way that creates a record (certified mail or hand delivery with a witness is common practice).
For fixed-term leases, the tenancy ends on the last day stated in the lease without either party needing to give notice, unless the lease provides otherwise. If neither party acts, the tenancy may automatically convert to month-to-month under Ohio law.
If a landlord wants to remove a tenant for nonpayment of rent or a lease violation, different rules apply. The landlord must serve the proper notice before filing in court. For help with those forms, see Ohio's eviction notice rules and our eviction notice generator.
Repairs and the warranty of habitability
Ohio recognizes an implied warranty of habitability under Ohio Rev. Code 5321.04. Landlords are required to maintain the premises in a fit and habitable condition, keep all structural components (roof, floors, walls) safe and intact, maintain electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning systems in good working order, and comply with all applicable housing, building, and health codes.

Ohio does not have a statutory repair-and-deduct remedy. That means tenants cannot legally make repairs themselves and subtract the cost from rent without risking eviction for nonpayment. Instead, tenants who face serious habitability failures must use the judicial rent-escrow process under ORC 5321.07. In that process, the tenant deposits rent into court, a judge holds a hearing, and the court can order the landlord to make repairs, reduce rent, or release the escrow to the tenant depending on the severity of the violations.
Before invoking rent escrow, the tenant should give the landlord written notice of the needed repair and allow reasonable time to fix it. Keeping copies of all communications is essential.
Rent, late fees, and rent control
Ohio sets no statutory cap on late fees. The lease governs when rent is due, any grace period, and the late fee amount. Courts have occasionally reduced fees that appear punitive rather than compensatory, but there is no bright-line limit in the statutes.
Landlords must give advance written notice of a rent increase before the increase takes effect. For month-to-month tenancies, the standard is at least 30 days. A lease-term increase is governed by the lease terms or requires a new agreement.
Rent control is preempted statewide in Ohio. No city, county, or municipality in Ohio may enact a law that controls or caps residential rents. Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and other large Ohio cities have no rent-stabilization ordinances, and local governments are forbidden from creating them. If you see references to rent control in any Ohio city, those regulations do not have legal force.
If you have a landlord-tenant dispute in Ohio
Start by documenting everything in writing. Send repair requests, complaints, and notices by certified mail or email so you have a dated record. If a landlord fails to return a deposit or violates the notice-to-enter rules, a written demand letter sent by certified mail is often enough to prompt resolution without going to court.

For deposit disputes involving amounts under $6,000, Ohio small claims court (called the Small Claims Division of Municipal or County Court) is the most efficient venue. Filing fees are modest, and you do not need an attorney. Bring all written communications, photographs, the lease, and your move-out documentation.
For habitability problems, the rent-escrow process under ORC 5321.07 offers structured judicial relief. Contact your local municipal court clerk for the correct forms. You can also file a complaint with your local building and housing department, which can issue citations and order repairs independently of any lawsuit.
State resources include the Ohio Attorney General's consumer protection office and local legal aid organizations. If you are facing eviction or a complex dispute involving significant money, consulting a licensed Ohio attorney is advisable.
For additional context on your rights as a squatter or occupant under Ohio property law, see Ohio squatters rights. For a full overview of how landlord-tenant law varies by state, visit the landlord-tenant laws hub.
This article is general legal information, not legal advice. Landlord-tenant rules vary by state and city and change, and some cities add their own ordinances. For advice about a specific situation, consult a licensed attorney or your state housing agency.
More Ohio Laws
- Ohio AI Meeting Recording Laws
- Ohio Alimony Laws
- Ohio At-Will Employment Laws
- Ohio Car Accident Laws
- Ohio Car Seat Laws
- Ohio Child Custody Laws
- Ohio Child Support Laws
- Ohio Common Law Marriage Laws
- Ohio Data Privacy Laws
- Ohio Divorce Laws
- Ohio Dog Bite Laws
- Ohio Emancipation Laws
- Ohio Expungement Laws
- Ohio Hit and Run Laws
- Ohio Lemon Laws
- Ohio Power of Attorney Laws
Sources
- Ohio Rev. Code Chapter 5321 (Landlord and Tenant): https://codes.ohio.gov/ohio-revised-code/chapter-5321
- Ohio Attorney General, Landlord-Tenant Rights: https://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/consumers/housing