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West Virginia Commercial Security Deposit Laws

Understand how commercial security deposits in West Virginia are fully lease-governed with no statutory limits, holding requirements, or return deadlines.

Melvin Prince
2 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
CommercialSecurity-depositWest-virginiaCommercial-leaseLandlord

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.

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West Virginia's residential Security Deposit Act (WV Code § 37-6A) applies only to residential tenancies. Commercial security deposits have no statutory regulation whatsoever — they are entirely governed by the lease agreement.

No Statutory Regulation In West Virginia commercial leasing:

  • No cap on the deposit amount.
  • No requirement to hold deposits in separate or interest-bearing accounts.
  • No prohibition on commingling deposits with other funds.
  • No statutory return deadline — the return timeline is whatever the lease specifies.
  • No mandated interest on the deposit.

Commercial deposits typically range from 3 to 6 months' rent, with higher amounts for tenants with limited credit or for properties with significant tenant improvements.

Key Lease Provisions

The commercial lease should clearly address:

  • Deposit amount and whether it adjusts upon rent escalation.
  • Holding: Separate account or commingled.
  • Permitted deductions: Unpaid rent, property damage, restoration costs, unpaid utilities, outstanding CAM charges.
  • Replenishment: Whether the tenant must restore the deposit after a draw-down.
  • Return timeline: Typically 30-60 days after lease expiry and move-out inspection.
  • Interest: Whether the tenant earns interest (negotiable).

Letters of Credit

For larger commercial tenancies, landlords may accept a standby letter of credit instead of a cash deposit:

  • Preserves tenant's working capital.
  • Must be irrevocable and unconditional.
  • The lease should address renewal obligations and burn-down provisions.

Sources & Official References

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