Alaska Rent Increase Laws: Rules and Notice Requirements
Understand Alaska's rent increase rules for landlords. Learn when you can raise the rent, how much notice is required, and exceptions for month-to-month le...
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Unlike some states with stringent, sweeping tenant protections regarding price hikes, Alaska's rent increase laws are relatively simple and highly favorable to landlords.
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under the official Alaska Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (AS 34.03.290).
No Statewide Rent Control
Alaska prohibits any form of rent control. There are no statewide statutory limits on how much a landlord can raise a tenant's rent, nor are municipalities allowed to pass their own rent control ordinances.
Landlords are free to charge whatever the local market will bear for an apartment or rental home. However, any rent increases must still adhere to proper notification procedures and cannot be instituted as a form of retaliation or discrimination.
When Rent Can Be Raised
Fixed-Term Leases
If a tenant is currently under a fixed-term lease (such as a 6-month or 1-year agreement), the landlord cannot raise the rent during the active term of that lease unless the lease agreement itself explicitly contains a provision allowing for a mid-term increase.
If no such provision exists, the landlord must wait until the current lease expires to offer a new lease at the higher rental rate.
Month-to-Month Tenancies For standard month-to-month rental agreements, landlords have the flexibility to raise the rent at any time, provided they give the tenant adequate written notice prior to the start of the next rental period.
Notice Requirements Alaska law is explicit regarding the timeline for notifying tenants of a rent increase.
For month-to-month tenancies, landlords must provide a minimum of 30 days' written notice before the rent increase takes effect.
- Crucially, this 30-day period must align with the rental period. If rent is due on the 1st of the month, and the landlord wants to increase the rent starting June 1st, they must serve the notice to the tenant on or before May 1st.
If a tenant receives a rent increase notice and chooses not to pay the new amount, the tenant may provide their own 30-day notice to terminate the tenancy and move out before the higher rent goes into effect.
Increases as Retaliation
While landlords have broad discretion over rent amounts, they cannot raise the rent in retaliation against a tenant who has recently exercised their legal rights.
A rent increase is considered retaliatory (and thus illegal) if it is issued shortly after a tenant:
- Complained to the landlord about unsafe living conditions.
- Complained to a government agency about housing code or health code violations.
- Organized or joined a tenant's union.
If a tenant successfully proves a rent increase was retaliatory, the landlord may be barred from enforcing the increase and could be liable for damages.
Back to Alaska Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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