Tenant screening disclosure
Tenant screening disclosure rules and regulations for landlords in District of Columbia.
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.Information last verified: April 2026.
Washington D.C. Required Lease Disclosures
Official Law Citation: The requirement to provide residential tenants with specific rights documentation is mandated by various sections, notably requiring the Tenant Bill of Rights per D.C. Code § 42-3502.17.
The District of Columbia enforces a comprehensive set of mandatory tenant disclosures. Handing a tenant the keys without providing the correct standardized pamphlets and addendums can invalidate an eviction attempt, expose the landlord to fines from the Department of Buildings (DOB) and the Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection (DLCP), and trigger significant civil liabilities.
Crucial District-Mandated Disclosures
Before or immediately at the time a lease is signed, a D.C. landlord must provide the following:
1. D.C. Tenant Bill of Rights Package
By law, the landlord must provide the prospective tenant with a complete, printed (or electronic, if agreed upon) copy of the Washington D.C. Tenant Bill of Rights Package, published by the Office of the Tenant Advocate (OTA). This comprehensive package includes the Bill of Rights pamphlet, a voter registration packet, and other mandatory forms. The tenant must acknowledge receipt of this document.
2. Rent Control and Base Rent Disclosure
For properties subject to Rent Stabilization (nearly all units built before 1976), the landlord must execute a highly specific disclosure outlining:
- The current, legally registered rent ceiling for that exact unit.
- A list of any rent increases implemented over the previous 3-year period.
- Whether the property claims a specific exemption from Rent Control.
3. Move-in Inspection Report
A landlord cannot legally retain a penny of a security deposit for damages unless they provided the tenant with a written, itemized inspection report detailing the exact condition of the premises within 5 days of the tenant moving in.
Structural and Safety Disclosures
1. Federal Lead-Based Paint
If the residential property was constructed prior to 1978, federal law mandates the landlord attach an EPA-approved Lead Hazard Information pamphlet, explicitly disclosing any known presence of lead-based paint on the premises.
2. D.C. Lead Disclosure Form
Beyond the federal mandate, D.C. law specifically requires landlords to complete a proprietary "Lead Warning Statement" that verifies whether the specific unit has been completely cleared of lead hazards by a certified D.C. inspector. Providing this local statutory form is mandatory for pre-1978 buildings.
3. Mold and Indoor Air Quality
Landlords must disclose any visible evidence of indoor mold or any historical instances of severe water intrusion within the past three years. If mold was discovered and professionally remediated, the landlord must provide the tenant with copies of the remediation certificates.
4. Bed Bugs
A landlord must explicitly disclose if the specific rental unit, or any immediately adjacent units within the same building, have suffered from a bed bug infestation within the previous 120 days.
Automate Your Addendums
Forgetting the D.C. Tenant Bill of Rights package or the local Lead Warning Statement can instantly destroy a landlord's legal standing in Superior Court. Landager allows you to integrate mandatory D.C. disclosure packets directly into the digital signature workflow, guaranteeing every tenant receives and signs off on every statutory mandate.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, required forms storage, and compliance tracking - making it easy to stay compliant with District of Columbia regulations.
Sources & Official References
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