Idaho Landlord Required Disclosures
Learn which mandatory disclosures Idaho landlords must provide to residential tenants, including federal lead-based paint laws and lease terms.
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.
Unlike states like California or New York, Idaho does not have a comprehensive list of state-mandated disclosures that landlords must provide to tenants prior to move-in. The regulatory landscape is minimal, relying mostly on federal law and basic contract law principles.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Idaho for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Federal Mandatory Disclosures
The most critical disclosures an Idaho landlord must make stem from federal regulations rather than state statutes:
1. Lead-Based Paint Disclosure
Under the Federal Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act, landlords leasing residential properties built prior to 1978 must provide specific information to applicants before signing a lease.
Landlords must provide:
- A mandatory EPA informational pamphlet titled "Protect Your Family from Lead in Your Home."
- Any known information or reports concerning the presence of lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards in the building.
- A Lead Warning Statement included as an attachment to the lease, which the tenant must sign and date.
Failure to provide lead disclosures can result in thousands of dollars in federal fines and potential civil liability if a tenant is harmed.
Common Sense and Contract Disclosures
While Idaho lacks explicit state statutes mandating items like mold disclosures or past meth lab presence, property owners must still define the parameters of the tenancy. As a matter of contract law, a landlord should explicitly disclose the mechanics of money handling to avoid disputes.
2. Security Deposit Terms
While not listed as a standalone "disclosure" statute, Idaho law states that a landlord can only extend the standard 21-day timeline to return a security deposit if it is executed in writing. Therefore, any move-out timelines and specific deposit deduction criteria must be explicitly disclosed in the written lease agreement.
3. Tenant Screening Criteria
If a landlord charges an application fee, they must disclose their screening criteria before accepting an application. Best practices indicate that landlords should supply applicants with a document stating exactly what is scrutinized (e.g., minimum credit score, income-to-rent ratio, criminal background checks) so that applicants act with full transparency.
4. Non-Refundable Fees
A tenant's security deposit cannot be classified as a non-refundable fee. If you charge a non-refundable cleaning fee, pet fee, or redecoration fee, this must be disclosed explicitly as a "fee" and not a "deposit" within the lease language. If it is ambiguous, courts may determine that the fee should have been refundable under standard deposit rules.
What is NOT Required in Idaho
Many landlords operating in multiple states assume certain disclosures are universal. In Idaho, there are currently no statutory requirements to disclose:
- Recent deaths or murders that occurred in the rental unit.
- The property's proximity to a registered sex offender (Megan's Law disclosure).
- Past incidents of bed bugs.
- Whether the property is in a high-risk flood zone (though providing this information is highly recommended for tenant safety and landlord liability mitigation).
How Landager Helps
Keeping track of which properties require lead-paint disclosures and maintaining signed copies from every tenant can be tedious. Landager's lease management platform automatically appends required addendums to leases and securely stores all digital signatures in one centralized location, ensuring you always have proof of compliance.
Back to Idaho Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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