North Dakota Lease Agreement Requirements & Rules
What every North Dakota lease must include, from late fee clauses to automatic renewal rules and oral lease validity.
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North Dakota Residential Lease Agreement Requirements
While North Dakota is generally landlord-friendly regarding rent control and rapid eviction timelines, the state strictly enforces the fundamental structure of the residential lease agreement itself.
Under the North Dakota Century Code (NDCC) Chapter 47-16, drafting an illegal or "unconscionable" clause into your lease can severely backfire, rendering the entire contract vulnerable in court.
Essential Lease Elements
A legally compliant North Dakota residential lease must clearly define:
- Parties and Premises: The exact legal names of all adult tenants, the landlord, and the precise address of the rental unit.
- Term: The exact start date and end date of the lease (or a statement defining it as month-to-month). If a lease term is for exactly one year, it can technically be a verbal agreement, but any lease lasting longer than one year must be in writing to be legally enforceable under the Statute of Frauds.
- Rent and Payment: The exact monthly rent amount, the due date, acceptable payment methods (e.g., electronic transfer, cashier's check), and precisely where rent should be sent.
- Security Deposit Details: The lease must clearly state the deposit amount, which cannot legally exceed one month's rent under NDCC 47-16-07.1, with one specific statutory exception: if the tenant has a pet, the landlord may collect a pet deposit that exceeds the standard one-month cap (subject to separate limits). The lease must also state that the landlord will pay the required statutory interest if the deposit is held for at least twelve months.
- Late Fees: Unlike some states with statutory maximums, North Dakota lets landlords set late fees, but they must be defined in the written lease, and they must be a "reasonable" estimate of damages, not a punitive fine.
Prohibited Lease Provisions (What NOT to Include)
Landlords cannot force tenants to sign away their fundamental legal protections. A rental agreement in North Dakota may not provide that the tenant:
- 1. Waives Habitability Rights: The tenant cannot agree to inhabit an unsafe structure or waive the landlord's statutory duty to maintain the premises in a fit and habitable condition. (See our Maintenance Obligations guide).
- 2. Agrees to Exculpatory Clauses: The lease cannot contain a clause where the tenant agrees to "indemnify and hold harmless" the landlord from liability arising from the landlord's own negligence, or from the landlord's failure to maintain a safe, habitable building. If a tenant breaks their leg due to a rotting staircase the landlord knew about, the landlord cannot hide behind a lease clause.
- 3. Agrees to "Self-Help" Evictions: A lease cannot grant the landlord the right to bypass the court system. Any clause allowing the landlord to unilaterally change locks, seize property, or shut off utilities for non-payment of rent is highly illegal.
Separation of Pet Deposits
As outlined in our Security Deposits guide, if a landlord allows pets, it is crucial to explicitly define the Pet Deposit as a completely separate line item from the general Security Deposit. North Dakota strictly regulates these caps independently ($2,500/two months' rent for pets vs. one month's rent for general deposits). Mixing them together in the lease phrasing invites legal challenges regarding statutory limits.
Subletting and Assignment North
Dakota law does not automatically grant residential tenants a statutory right to sublet their apartments.
Whether a tenant can sublet their unit to a third party is determined entirely by the language in the lease agreement. Most standard North Dakota landlords use a clause that strictly prohibits subletting or assigning the lease without the landlord's express, prior written consent. If a tenant sublets in violation of this clause, they are breaching the lease and are subject to a swift 3-Day Notice to Quit.
See our Eviction Process guide.
Official Law Citation: This information is derived from NDCC Chapter 47-16. For current statutes, visit the North Dakota Legislative Branch.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, automated rent collection, and maintenance workflows - making it easy to stay compliant with North Dakota regulations.
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