District of Columbia Landlord-Tenant Compliance

Comprehensive guide to District of Columbia landlord-tenant laws, including the RENTAL Act of 2025 and TOPA requirements.

Melvin Prince
4 min čtení
Ověřeno May 2026United States flag
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Last Verified
2026-05-06
Rent Control
Widespread (unless exempt)
Eviction Reason Required
Yes (Just Cause)
Tenant Purchase Rights
Yes (TOPA)

District of Columbia Landlord-Tenant Overview

Official Law Citation: The primary rules governing residential landlord-tenant relationships in Washington D.C. are found in the D.C. Code Title 42, Chapter 35 (Rental Housing Act) and DCMR Title 14. Effective Date: The District of Columbia Code foundations date to February 21, 1871, with the primary Rental Housing Act taking effect on July 17, 1985.

The District of Columbia operates one of the most rigorously regulated, tenant-friendly rental environments in the United States. Navigating the D.C. rental market requires landlords to intimately understand strict Rent Control (Rent Stabilization) caps, exhaustive eviction protections, and the powerful Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA).

In late 2025, the D.C. Council enacted the Rebalancing Expectations for Neighbors, Tenants, and Landlords (RENTAL) Act of 2025 (D.C. Law 26-80), which overhauled decades-old eviction timelines and TOPA exemptions in an effort to stimulate housing development while preserving tenant rights.

[!CAUTION] RENTAL Act of 2025 Impact: Effective December 31, 2025, the RENTAL Act fundamentally changed D.C. property management—drastically reducing pre-eviction notice periods for non-payment from 30 days to 10 days, overhauling ERAP, and granting 15-year TOPA exemptions for newly constructed multifamily buildings.

1. Rent Control (Rent Stabilization)

Unless specifically exempt (e.g., properties built after 1975 or landlords who own 4 or fewer units and register for an exemption under D.C. Code § 42-3502.05), rental properties in D.C. are subject to strict annual rent control caps dictated by the Rental Housing Commission.

  • The maximum allowable rent increase for the 2025-2026 Rent Control Year (May 1, 2025 - April 30, 2026) is 4.8% for most tenants, and heavily curtailed to 2.5% for elderly or disabled tenants.
  • All increases require a formal 60-day written notice to the tenant.

2. Security Deposits & Escrow

D.C. strictly caps residential security deposits at a maximum of one month's rent (14 DCMR § 308). Critically, landlords must hold these funds in a specialized, interest-bearing escrow account physically located within the District of Columbia. Deposits (plus accrued interest) must be returned within 45 days of the tenant vacating. The 2025 RENTAL Act further mandates that any deductions exceeding $50 must now be accompanied by explicit receipts.

3. The Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA)

TOPA (D.C. Code § 42-3404.02) grants D.C. tenants the legal right to match an offer and purchase their building if the landlord attempts to sell it. This decades-old law frequently delayed property sales for months. However, the 2025 RENTAL Act introduced massive TOPA exemptions to spur investment, most notably a 15-year total TOPA exemption for newly constructed multifamily properties.

4. Evictions & ERAP Reforms

D.C. demands a legally valid "cause" to evict a tenant or refuse a lease renewal; landlords cannot simply end a month-to-month lease without a justifiable reason. The 2025 RENTAL act streamlined this process for landlords, shrinking the mandatory "Notice to Vacate" for non-payment of rent from 30 days down to 10 days, and granting Superior Court of the District of Columbia judges discretion to proceed with evictions rather than mandatorily pausing cases for pending Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP) applications.


Manage

D.C. Compliance Automatically

Tracking hyper-specific, fluctuating rent control limits (like the 4.8% / 2.5% splits) and proving D.C. escrow interest payments is a logistical nightmare. Landager automatically structures allowable rent increases based on 2025 updates and securely logs the required 10-day eviction notices in compliance with D.C. Superior Court standards.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, property registration, and document compliance tracking - making it easy to stay compliant with District of Columbia regulations.

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