Rent controlled apartments dc
Rent controlled apartments dc rules and regulations for landlords in District of Columbia.
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Washington D.C. Rent Control & Increases
Official Law Citation: The rules around rent stabilization (rent control) and allowable increases are found in the Rental Housing Act, D.C. Code § 42-3502.05.
The District of Columbia operates under one of the most detailed and heavily enforced Rent Control (Rent Stabilization) frameworks in the nation. Navigating rent increases in D.C. requires landlords to understand their property's exact exemption status and meticulously track the Annual CPI caps issued by the Rental Housing Commission.
Is Your Property Subject to Rent Control?
Under the D.C. Rental Housing Act of 1985, all residential rental units are presumed to be under rent control unless the landlord actively files for and receives an official exemption from the Rent Administrator.
The most common exemptions include:
- Newly Constructed Buildings: Properties built after December 31, 1975, or newly created additions to existing structures.
- Small Landlords: Natural persons (not massive LLCs or corporations) who own a total of four or fewer rental units in the District. (Note: To claim this exemption, the landlord must still register the property and file an actual Claim of Exemption form).
- Subsidized Housing: Units that are temporarily subject to specific low-income housing programs.
Rent Control Increase Caps (2025-2026)
For properties subject to Rent Stabilization, rent can only be increased once per 12-month period, and the amount is strictly capped based on the regional Consumer Price Index (CPI-W).
The D.C. Rental Housing Commission set the following maximum allowable rent increases for the May 1, 2025 through April 30, 2026 Rent Control Year (RCY):
- Standard Tenants: Maximum increase of 4.8%.
- Elderly or Disabled Tenants: Maximum increase of 2.5%. (Tenants aged 62 or older, or those with significant disabilities, must proactively register this status with the Rent Administrator to qualify for the lowered cap).
[!WARNING] If a landlord illegally attempts an increase beyond the established cap (e.g., trying to impose a 10% rent hike), the tenant can petition the Rental Accommodations Division. Landlords risk rolling back the rent, refunding the illegal overcharges (often with triple damages), and paying civil fines up to $5,000 per violation.
Rules for Rent-Exempt Properties
If a landlord has perfectly secured a legal exemption (such as owning a condo built in 1995), there is theoretically no statutory cap on how high they can raise the rent when a twelve-month lease expires.
However, even exempt landlords must strictly adhere to the following procedural rules:
- Frequency: Base rent cannot be increased more than once in any 12-month period, regardless of lease structure.
- Anti-Retaliation: A landlord cannot impose a massive, unconscionable rent increase strategically designed to force a tenant out in retaliation for reporting code violations.
- Notice Periods: All rent increases (for both controlled and exempt properties) require a minimum 60-day written notice before they take legal effect.
Never Guess on Rent Control Limits
Accidentally raising rent by 5% when the D.C. Commission maxed it at 4.8% exposes you to treble damages. Landager's automated lease renewal engine syncs with the exact DHCD published rates, preventing non-compliant offers and automatically generating flawless 60-day notices for your entire portfolio.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, automated notice reminders, and rent roll management - making it easy to stay compliant with District of Columbia regulations.
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