Alaska Landlord Maintenance Obligations and Habitability Standards

Learn about the warranty of habitability in Alaska, landlord and tenant responsibilities for keeping properties safe, and the repair and deduct remedy.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
maintenancealaskahabitabilitylandlord-responsibilitiesrepairs

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Under the Alaska Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, landlords are legally obligated to maintain rental properties in a safe and habitable condition throughout the entirety of a tenancy. This requirement is commonly referred to in courts as the Implied Warranty of Habitability.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Alaska for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Landlord's Responsibility

Under AS 34.03.100, an Alaska landlord must make all repairs and do whatever is necessary to keep the premises in a "fit and habitable" condition.

Specifically, the landlord is legally required to:

  1. Comply with Codes: Adhere to all applicable building and housing codes materially affecting health and safety.
  2. Structural Integrity: Keep all major structural components, roofs, and walls secure and weather-tight.
  3. Essential Systems: Maintain all electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning systems in good, safe working order.
  4. Water and Heat: Supply running water, reasonable amounts of hot water, and heat at all times (unless the building is not required by law to have heating/water facilities, or the tenant has direct, exclusive control over the utility connections and meters).
  5. Appliances: Maintain any appliances supplied by the landlord (like refrigerators and stoves) in good working order.
  6. Common Areas: Keep multi-unit building common areas clean and fundamentally safe.
  7. Safety Equipment: Provide and maintain functional smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors as required by law.
  8. Trash/Garbage: Provide and maintain appropriate receptacles for the removal of ashes, garbage, and rubbish.

The Tenant's Responsibilities

While the landlord is responsible for major systems and structural integrity, tenants also bear significant, legally defined maintenance obligations (AS 34.03.120).

Tenants must:

  • Keep the premises as clean and safe as the condition of the premises permits.
  • Dispose of all ashes, rubbish, and garbage in a clean and safe manner.
  • Keep all plumbing fixtures as clean as their condition permits.
  • Use electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, and other facilities reasonably.
  • Promptly notify the landlord if repairs are needed.
  • Not deliberately or negligently destroy, deface, damage, or remove any part of the premises.
  • Replace batteries in smoke and carbon monoxide detectors during the tenancy.

If a repair is required due to the tenant's negligence or deliberate action, the landlord can generally bill the tenant for the immediate repair cost.

Notice and Repair Timelines

When a tenant encounters a maintenance issue affecting habitability, they must notify the landlord. While oral notification suffices in some emergency cases, written notice is always recommended for legal documentation.

Once notified, Alaska landlords must address the repairs within a reasonable timeframe:

  • 10 Days: For most significant non-emergency repairs, the landlord is expected to resolve the issue within 10 days of receiving notice.
  • Emergency Repairs: If the issue poses a severe, immediate threat to health or safety (e.g., total loss of heat in the winter, or a major plumbing flood), the landlord must act much faster, often expected within 1 to 3 days.

If a landlord must enter the unit to perform a repair, they must provide the tenant with at least 24 hours' advanced notice and enter at reasonable times, except in true emergencies.

Tenant Remedies for Unresolved Issues

If a landlord continuously fails to make necessary repairs affecting habitability after receiving proper notice, the tenant has statutory remedies available to them:

  1. Repair and Deduct: For minor repairs that the landlord ignores, the tenant may arrange for the work to be done themselves, pay for it, and then deduct the actual and reasonable cost of the repair from their next rent payment. The tenant must submit the itemized repair receipts to the landlord.
  2. Procure Substitute Housing: If the landlord deliberately or negligently fails to supply heat, water, hot water, or essential services, the tenant may procure reasonable substitute housing during the period of noncompliance and be excused from paying rent for that duration.
  3. Terminate the Lease: If the lack of maintenance results in a total breach of the implied warranty of habitability, the tenant can deliver written notice specifying the breach and terminate the rental agreement if the issue is not remedied.
  4. Lawsuit: Tenants can sue for damages, including a reduction in the rental value of the dwelling during the period of disrepair.

How Landager Helps

Tracking maintenance requests efficiently is critical to avoiding "repair and deduct" scenarios. Landager simplifies property maintenance with a unified communication dashboard. Tenants can submit maintenance tickets with photos instantly, generating an automatic, timestamped log that proves exactly when a request was received and how quickly your team mitigated the issue.

Back to Alaska Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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