Massachusetts Maintenance Obligations: Habitability and the Sanitary Code
Understand Massachusetts landlord maintenance obligations, including the implied warranty of habitability, heating requirements, and the Sanitary Code.
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Massachusetts imposes a strong implied warranty of habitability on all landlords. This non-waivable duty requires rental properties to meet the State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410.000) at all times. A landlord cannot avoid these obligations by drafting them away in the lease.
Official Law Citation: 105 CMR 410.000 (State Sanitary Code) and M.G.L. Chapter 111, Section 127L.
The Implied Warranty of Habitability
Under Massachusetts common law (established in Boston Housing Authority v. Hemingway, 1973), every residential tenancy comes with an implied warranty that the landlord will maintain the premises in a habitable condition. This is a powerful tenant protection because:
- The tenant cannot waive this warranty.
- If the warranty is breached, it serves as a defense against eviction for non-payment of rent (the tenant can argue they are not obligated to pay full rent for a substandard unit).
- A breach of the warranty gives the tenant the right to withhold rent, repair and deduct, or seek damages (including a reduction in rent reflecting the decreased value of the unit).
The State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410.000)
The Sanitary Code sets the specific, measurable minimum standards that define "habitable." Key requirements include:
Heating Requirements
- Landlords must provide a heating system capable of maintaining a temperature of at least 68°F (20°C) between 7:00 AM and 11:00 PM and at least 64°F (18°C) between 11:01 PM and 6:59 AM in all habitable rooms.
- The heating season runs from September 15 through June 15 each year.
- Even outside the formal heating season, the system must work.
- (Note: If the tenant has agreed in the lease to pay for heat, the landlord must still ensure the heating equipment is functioning).
Essential Services
- Hot and cold water at an adequate temperature and pressure.
- Electricity in working order.
- Plumbing free from leaks and obstructions.
- Working kitchen with a stove and oven (unless specifically agreed otherwise).
Structural Standards
- Watertight and weatherproof exterior (roof, walls, windows, doors).
- Structurally sound floors, stairways, and railings.
- Properly functioning locks on all exterior doors and ground-floor windows.
Pest Control
- The landlord is primarily responsible for pest infestations (roaches, mice, bedbugs) unless the tenant caused the infestation. Bedbug responsibility is nuanced; the landlord is generally responsible for the first treatment.
The Repair Process
- Tenant notifies landlord: The tenant should provide written notice of the repair needed.
- Landlord responds: The landlord typically has 14 days (for non-emergency repairs) to address the issue. Emergency repairs (e.g., no heat in winter, flooding) must be addressed immediately.
- Board of Health inspection: If the landlord fails to act, the tenant can request an inspection from the local Board of Health, which can issue violation notices and fines.
- Repair and deduct: If the landlord fails to perform necessary repairs after written notice, the tenant may, in some circumstances, arrange repairs and deduct the cost from rent (up to two months' rent in any 12-month period, with proper documentation).
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