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Ohio Rent Increase Laws & Notice Periods

Find out the notice requirements for raising rent in Ohio and the statewide ban on rent control ordinances.

Melvin Prince
4 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
OhioRent increaseRent control banNotice periodLandlord rights

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.

Rent Control
Prohibited
Month-to-Month Notice
30 Days
Retaliation
Strictly Illegal

Ohio is a highly landlord-friendly state regarding rent pricing. There are no state-level rent caps, and the Ohio legislature has actively preempted local municipalities from enacting their own rent control ordinances.

In Ohio, the free market dictates rental rates.

The Ban on Rent Control

A landlord operating a multifamily complex in Cleveland has the exact same freedom to raise rents as a landlord renting a single-family home in rural Ohio. No local city council can pass a law restricting rent increases or establishing strict "rent stabilization" boards.

A landlord can raise the rent by any percentage they deem appropriate, provided they follow the correct procedural notice rules.

Notice Requirements for Rent Increases

While the actual dollar amount is unrestricted, landlords cannot simply surprise a tenant with a higher bill.

Month-to-Month Tenancies (Periodic)

To raise the rent on a tenant who pays on a month-to-month basis, the landlord must provide 30 days' advance written notice before the next rental period begins.

If rent is due on the 1st of the month, and a landlord wants to increase the rent starting June 1st, they must serve the written notice of the increase on or before May 1st. If the tenant believes the new rent is too high, the 30-day notice provides them the opportunity to issue their own 30-day notice to terminate the tenancy and move out before the higher rate takes effect.

Fixed-Term Leases

If a tenant is currently under a 12-month lease, the landlord cannot raise the rent during the active lease term. The rent price is locked in by the contract.

To raise the rent for the following year, the landlord must offer the tenant a lease renewal incorporating the new, higher rate. (Most landlords provide these renewal offers 30 to 60 days before the current lease expires, depending on the terms of the existing lease).

The Exception: Retaliatory Increases

The only condition under which an Ohio judge will strike down a rent increase is if the tenant can prove the increase was explicitly retaliatory.

Under ORC 5321.02, a landlord cannot increase rent, decrease services, or refuse to renew a lease in retaliation against a tenant who:

  1. Complained to an appropriate governmental agency about a building, housing, or health code violation that materially affects health and safety.
  2. Complained to the landlord to fulfill their statutory duties under ORC 5321.04.
  3. Joined a tenant's union or similar organization.

If a landlord attempts to raise the rent by 40% immediately after the city health department issues a citation based on the tenant's complaint, the tenant can use the retaliation statute as a defense against eviction and may be awarded actual damages and attorney's fees.

Standardize Lease Renewals

Manually tracking the expiration dates of hundreds of Ohio leases to ensure 30-day rent increase notices are sent out accurately is an administrative bottleneck. Landager automates your renewal pipelines. You define your market rate adjustments, and the platform automatically generates and dispatches the required 30-day written rent increase notices directly to the tenants, ensuring your portfolio's revenue scales gracefully without violating procedural timelines.

Official Law Citation: This information is derived from ORC Section 5321.02. For current statutes, visit the Ohio Revised Code.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, automated rent collection, and maintenance workflows - making it easy to stay compliant with Ohio regulations.

Back to Ohio Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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