Tennessee Lease Requirements: Essential Clauses and Prohibited Terms

Discover what must be included—and what is strictly prohibited—in a Tennessee residential lease agreement under URLTA and the 2025 Transparency Act.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
lease-agreementtennesseeURLTAillegal-clausesHB-1814

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

A well-drafted lease is a landlord's strongest defense in Tennessee, particularly given the state's two-tiered legal system (URLTA vs. non-URLTA counties). However, landlords must be cautious not to include illegal clauses that could render portions of the agreement unenforceable in court.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a qualified Tennessee attorney when drafting a lease. Information last verified: March 2026.

Written vs. Oral Agreements

In Tennessee, oral rental agreements are legally valid for tenancies lasting less than three years. However, a written lease is strongly recommended—and practically mandatory for professional property management—to define rights, prove terms in court, and comply with complex disclosure laws.

Essential Lease Components

A compliant Tennessee lease should clearly define:

  1. Names of Parties: Full legal names of all adult occupants and the landlord/management company.
  2. Property Description: The exact address and unit number.
  3. Rent Terms: Rent amount, due date, acceptable payment methods, and exactly where to send payment.
  4. Late Fees: Crucially, late fees must be detailed in the written lease to be enforceable. By law, they cannot exceed 10% of the past-due rent and require a 5-day grace period.
  5. Security Deposit Details: The amount and the name/address of the Tennessee bank where the deposit is held in a separate account.
  6. Utility Breakdown: Clearly delineating landlord versus tenant responsibilities for electricity, water, gas, and trash.
  7. Right of Entry: The landlord must explicitly state in the lease their right to show the unit to prospective tenants during the final 30 days of the tenancy. Without it, the landlord risks trespassing claims.

The Landlord Transparency Act (2025) Additions

For properties in URLTA counties (populations > 75,000), leases signed or renewed on or after January 1, 2025, must include the expanded contact disclosures mandated by HB 1814:

  • Owner name, phone number, and direct email.
  • Managing agent contact info (if applicable).
  • A dedicated 24-hour emergency phone number.
  • A dedicated maintenance email or phone number.

Prohibited Lease Clauses (URLTA)

Under the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (T.C.A. § 66-28-203), landlords are strictly forbidden from including certain clauses. Even if the tenant signs the lease, these clauses are void:

  • Waiver of URLTA Rights: Any clause where the tenant agrees to waive their rights or remedies under URLTA (such as the implied warranty of habitability).
  • Exculpatory Clauses: Any clause limiting the landlord's liability for active negligence or failure to maintain the property.
  • Confession of Judgment: Clauses where the tenant authorizes the landlord to confess judgment on a claim arising from the lease.
  • Paying Landlord's Legal Fees: Blank clauses requiring the tenant to pay the landlord's attorney's fees without the corresponding right for the tenant to recover fees if they prevail in court.

If a landlord deliberately uses a lease containing prohibited provisions, the tenant may recover actual damages and attorney's fees.

How Landager Helps

Drafting a lease that complies with both URLTA requirements and the new 2025 Transparency Act requires constant updating. Landager’s lease generation engine uses localized, Tennessee-specific templates that dynamically lock the late fee cap at 10%, enforce the 5-day grace period, and automatically exclude any provisions prohibited by T.C.A. § 66-28-203, ensuring your contracts hold up in General Sessions Court.

Back to Tennessee Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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