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Maryland Lease Requirements: Written Terms & Banned Clauses

Review Maryland lease agreement requirements, including when written leases are mandatory, prohibited clauses, and automatic renewals.

Melvin Prince
3 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
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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.

Written Requirement
Mandatory for >4 units or if deposit charged
Receipt Request
Must provide if requested
Copy to Tenant
Required at signing

A Maryland lease agreement forms the legal foundation of the landlord-tenant relationship. While oral leases are technically legal under certain conditions, written agreements are strongly recommended and are mandatory for any residential tenancy if the landlord charges a security deposit or owns more than four residential rental units, as well as for tenancies lasting one year or more.

When Must a Lease Be in Writing?

Under Maryland law (Real Property § 8-208), a written lease is mandatory for any residential tenancy, regardless of duration, if the landlord charges a security deposit or if the landlord owns more than four residential rental units. While oral leases might be permissible for certain short-term tenancies where these specific conditions are not met, written agreements are strongly recommended, and the Maryland Statute of Frauds independently requires any lease of exactly one year or longer to be in writing.

If a landlord offers a written lease, it must:

  • Provide a copy to the tenant.
  • State the name and address of the landlord or their authorized agent.
  • Include a receipt for any security deposit paid (incorporating specific statutory language).

Prohibited Lease Clauses

Maryland law explicitly bans certain terms from being included in a residential lease. Any clause attempting to enforce these is automatically void and unenforceable. A landlord cannot include a clause that:

  1. Authorizes a "self-help" eviction (e.g., permits the landlord to change locks or remove belongings without a court order).
  2. Waives the tenant's right to a trial by jury.
  3. Waives the landlord's liability for damages or injuries caused by the landlord's own negligence (exculpatory clauses).
  4. Imposes a late fee exceeding 5% of the amount of rent due for the rental period for which the payment is delinquent.
  5. Permits a late fee if the rent is paid within 5 days of the due date (mandating a 5-day grace period).
  6. Requires a tenant to provide more than a 30-day notice to terminate a month-to-month tenancy (unless the landlord is required to give an equal or longer notice period).

If a landlord attempts to enforce a lease containing a prohibited provision, the tenant can sue for actual damages incurred, plus attorney's fees.

Automatic Renewal Clauses

Many written leases contain an automatic renewal provision, which states that the lease will automatically renew for another term (e.g., another year) unless either party gives notice.

In Maryland, an automatic renewal clause is only enforceable if it is distinctly set apart from the other terms of the lease and the tenant separately acknowledges it by initialing or signing next to that specific clause.

Standardization Protects Portfolios

Drafting a lease from scratch in Maryland invites trouble with prohibited clauses. Landager provides attorney-reviewed, state-specific lease templates that strictly adhere to Maryland's Real Property Article, ensuring every automatic renewal is properly initialed and every late fee clause respects the 5% cap.

Back to Maryland Overview

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, payments, and compliance document dates - making it easy to stay compliant with Maryland regulations.

Back to Maryland Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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