South Dakota Lease Agreement Requirements: Written, Oral, and Essential Clauses
Complete guide to South Dakota lease requirements including written vs oral leases, mandatory clauses, prohibited provisions, and landlord best practices.
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.
South Dakota allows both written and oral lease agreements, but imposes specific requirements depending on the lease duration. Understanding these requirements ensures your rental agreements are legally enforceable and protect your interests as a property owner.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in South Dakota for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Written vs. Oral Leases
| Lease Type | Maximum Valid Duration | Best For | Statute |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oral lease | Up to 1 year | Short-term or month-to-month tenancies | SDCL §43-32-5 |
| Written lease | Any duration | All tenancies, especially over 1 year | SDCL §43-32-5 |
The One-Year Rule
Under SDCL §43-32-5, any lease for a period longer than one year is only valid if it is:
- In writing
- Signed by the lessor (landlord) or their authorized agent
An oral agreement for more than one year is unenforceable in South Dakota.
Oral Lease Considerations
While oral leases for one year or less are legally valid:
- They are difficult to enforce — disputes become "he said, she said"
- They provide less protection for both parties
- They default to month-to-month tenancy terms
- They are subject to the same state landlord-tenant laws as written leases
Recommendation: Always use a written lease, even for short-term tenancies.
Essential Lease Clauses
While South Dakota does not mandate specific lease language, the following clauses should be included in every lease agreement:
Required Information
- Names of all parties — Full legal names of the landlord and all tenants
- Property address — Complete address of the rental unit
- Lease term — Start date, end date, and renewal terms
- Rent amount and due date — Monthly rent, where to pay, acceptable methods
- Security deposit — Amount, conditions for return, and deduction policies
- Property manager contact — Names and addresses of authorized managers (required by SDCL §43-32-30)
Recommended Clauses
- Late fee policy — Amount, when applied, and grace period (if any)
- Maintenance responsibilities — Who handles specific repairs
- Pet policy — Whether pets are allowed, any deposits or fees
- Guest policy — Rules for overnight guests
- Utilities — Which utilities the tenant is responsible for
- Entry notice terms — How and when the landlord may enter (default is 24 hours' written notice)
- Parking — Assigned spaces, guest parking rules
- Smoking policy — Whether smoking is permitted on the premises
- Noise and conduct — Quiet hours, nuisance provisions
- Subletting — Whether subletting or assignment is permitted
- Renewal and termination — How the lease renews and how either party can terminate
Provisions That Cannot Be Waived
Certain tenant protections under South Dakota law cannot be waived in a lease, even if both parties agree:
| Protection | Statute | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Implied warranty of habitability | SDCL §43-32-8 | Landlord must maintain livable conditions |
| Repair and deduct remedy | SDCL §43-32-9 | Tenant can repair and deduct if landlord fails |
| Retaliation protection | SDCL §43-32-27 | Cannot evict or raise rent in retaliation |
| Security deposit limits | SDCL §43-32-6.1 | Cannot exceed 1 month (unless special conditions) |
| Security deposit return deadlines | SDCL §43-32-24 | Must return within statutory timeframes |
Any lease clause that attempts to waive these protections is void and unenforceable.
Prohibited Lease Clauses
The following types of provisions are either prohibited or unenforceable in South Dakota:
- Waiver of habitability — Clauses relieving the landlord of maintenance obligations
- Excessive late fees — Fees that are unreasonable or punitive in nature
- Waiver of tenant's right to repair and deduct — Cannot eliminate this statutory remedy
- Waiver of duty to return security deposit — Cannot override statutory return deadlines
- Confession of judgment — Clauses that allow one party to obtain a judgment without the other party having an opportunity to defend
Lease Renewal and Termination
Fixed-Term Leases
- Automatically end on the specified date
- Either party can choose not to renew
- If the tenant remains after the lease expires without a new agreement, a month-to-month tenancy is typically created
Month-to-Month Tenancies
- Either party can terminate with 15 days' written notice (as of July 1, 2024, per SB 89)
- Rent increases require 30 days' written notice
Best Practices for Landlords
- Always use a written lease — Even for short-term tenancies
- Use clear, plain language — Avoid legal jargon that tenants may not understand
- Include all required disclosures — See our Required Disclosures guide
- Review the lease annually — Update clauses to reflect changes in the law
- Have each tenant sign individually — Ensure all adult occupants are on the lease
- Provide a copy — Give the tenant a signed copy of the lease
- Store securely — Keep the original in a safe, accessible location
- Consult an attorney — Have a local attorney review your lease template
How Landager Helps
Landager provides lease management tools that help you track lease terms, renewal dates, and key clauses — ensuring your South Dakota rental agreements stay current and compliant.
Sources & Official References
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