Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

Kansas Commercial Security Deposits

Understand Kansas commercial security deposit rules — no statutory cap, no escrow requirement, and fully contract-driven terms.

Melvin Prince
3 min lesing
Verifisert Apr 2026United States flag
KansasKommersiellDepositum kansas kommersiellReturnering av depositum for kommersiell leieavtale kansas

Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelse

Dette innholdet er kun for generell informasjon og opplæring. Det utgjør ikke juridisk rådgivning og bør ikke stoles på som sådan. Lover endres ofte – verifiser alltid gjeldende forskrifter og konsulter en lisensiert advokat i din jurisdiksjon for råd spesifikt for din situasjon. Landager er en eiendomsforvaltningsplattform, ikke et advokatfirma.Informasjon sist verifisert: April 2026.

Max Amount
No Limit
Return Deadline
Per Lease

Kansas Commercial Security Deposits

The strict residential security deposit rules under K.S.A. 58-2550 (capping deposits at 1 or 1.5 months' rent) do not apply to commercial leases in Kansas. Commercial security deposits are governed entirely by the terms negotiated within the lease agreement.

Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are legally rooted in contractual agreements, as the Kansas Residential Landlord and Tenant Act security deposit caps do not apply.

No Statutory Limits

Kansas imposes no cap on the deposit amount a commercial landlord may require. Common practice in Kansas commercial real estate includes:

  • Retail and Office: Typically 1-3 months of base rent, depending on the tenant's creditworthiness and the cost of any tenant improvement (TI) allowances.
  • Industrial and Warehouse: Often 2-6 months of base rent, particularly for tenants requiring specialized build-outs.

No Escrow or Interest Requirements

Kansas does not require commercial landlords to hold deposits in dedicated escrow accounts or to pay interest on commercial security deposit balances. The landlord may commingle these funds with general operating accounts unless the lease specifically prohibits it.

Alternative Security Instruments

Many Kansas commercial landlords accept or require alternatives to traditional cash deposits:

  • Irrevocable Letters of Credit (LOC): Issued by the tenant's bank, these provide guaranteed access to funds without tying up the tenant's cash.
  • Personal Guarantees: Particularly common for small business tenants operating through LLCs, where the landlord requires the principal owner to personally guarantee the lease obligations.
  • Surety Bonds: Less common but available for tenants who prefer not to surrender capital.

Return Timelines and Deductions

Because the residential 30-day return deadline does not apply, the commercial lease must explicitly state:

  • The exact timeline for returning the deposit after the tenant vacates (commonly 30-90 days).
  • The process for reconciling outstanding charges (e.g., final CAM reconciliation, property restoration costs).
  • Definitions of "normal wear and tear" versus actionable damage in a commercial context.

Track Massive Commercial Deposits

Losing track of a six-figure commercial deposit or forgetting a Letter of Credit renewal date is a financial disaster. Landager helps you securely document and track commercial deposit instruments alongside the lease agreement.

Organize your commercial liabilities with Landager


How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, required compliance items, and accounting records - making it easy to stay compliant with Kansas regulations.

Back to Kansas Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Kilder og offisielle referanser

Likte du denne veiledningen? Del den:

📬 Få varsler når disse lovene endres

Vi sender deg e-post når utleielovgivningen oppdateres i Ingen spam — kun lovendringer.

Vi kartlegger aktivt lover for United States. Meld deg på ventelisten, så får du vite det med en gang det slippes!

Diskusjon