North Dakota Landlord Required Disclosures

Understand the required disclosures for residential landlords in North Dakota, focusing on federal lead-based paint rules and the importance of a move-in checklist.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
north dakotausaresidentialdisclosureslead-based paint

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.

North Dakota Landlord Required Disclosures

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in North Dakota for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Compared to states like California or New York, North Dakota imposes a relatively light administrative burden on landlords regarding required state-level disclosures. However, failing to provide the disclosures that are required—particularly federal ones—can result in devastating financial penalties.

1. Federal Lead-Based Paint Disclosure

Because North Dakota lacks an extensive list of state-specific hazard disclosures, the heavy lifting falls to federal law. If you are leasing a residential property built prior to 1978, you are strictly bound by the federal Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act.

This is the most critical disclosure a North Dakota landlord must handle. Before a tenant signs a lease or hands over a deposit, the landlord must:

  • Provide the prospective tenant with the EPA-approved information pamphlet, "Protect Your Family From Lead In Your Home."
  • Explicitly disclose any known presence of lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards in the specific dwelling unit or common areas.
  • Provide the tenant with any available records or reports concerning lead-based paint in the building.
  • Include a highly specific, standardized "Lead Warning Statement" within the lease agreement, which the tenant must physically sign or initial.

The EPA aggressively audits and enforces this law. Fines for violating the lead-based paint disclosure rules can exceed $19,000 per violation.

2. Identity of Landlord and Manager

While implied in standard business practices, it is a legal necessity for a tenant to know exactly who they are dealing with. The lease agreement should clearly identify, in writing, the name and address of:

  • The owner of the premises.
  • Any person authorized to manage the premises (e.g., the property management company).
  • Any person authorized to act on behalf of the owner for the purpose of receiving legal notices, demands, and paying rent.

3. The Move-In Condition Checklist (Best Practice)

Crucial Note: North Dakota state law does not statutorily mandate that a landlord provide a specific, state-approved Move-In Condition Checklist to the tenant.

However, from a legal defense standpoint, a Move-In Checklist is functionally required if the landlord ever intends to withhold money from the security deposit.

Under NDCC Chapter 47-16, a landlord can only withhold a security deposit for damages "beyond normal wear and tear" or unpaid rent. If a landlord attempts to deduct $800 for stained carpets at move-out, and the tenant sues, claiming the stains were there when they moved in, the burden of proof is heavily on the landlord. Without a highly detailed, countersigned Move-In Checklist containing photographs proving the carpets were perfect on day one, the landlord will almost certainly lose the lawsuit and be forced to return the deposit (potentially facing double damages for wrongful retention).

See our Security Deposits guide.

How Landager Helps North Dakota Landlords

Missing a simple federal compliance check on an older property opens you to massive EPA fines that can wipe out a year's rental profit. Landager automates your disclosure defenses. The system automatically cross-references the construction year of your North Dakota property. If it predates 1978, the platform instantly injects the mandatory EPA "Protect Your Family From Lead" pamphlet and the required Lead Warning Statement addendum directly into the digital leasing flow, forcing the tenant to acknowledge receipt before the system allows them to sign the final lease. Furthermore, it permanently appends the digital, photos-included Move-In condition report to the master lease file, ensuring you have the exact evidence needed to defend your security deposit deductions upon move-out.

Back to North Dakota Residential Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Готовы упростить свой арендный бизнес?

Присоединяйтесь к тысячам независимых арендодателей, которые оптимизировали свой бизнес с помощью Landager.

Начать 14-дневную бесплатную пробную версию