South Carolina Landlord Required Disclosures

A comprehensive list of mandatory disclosures South Carolina landlords must provide to tenants prior to renting, including lead paint and agent identification.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

Before entering a binding lease agreement in South Carolina, state and federal laws compel landlords to present explicit legal disclosures to their tenants. Providing this information uniformly safeguards landlords from legal penalties and ensures tenant transparency.

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

State-Mandated Disclosures

The South Carolina Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (SCRLTA) mandates that landlords must communicate two key points of information either in writing before the tenancy starts or within the contract itself.

1. Owner or Authorized Agent Identity

Landlords or property owners must officially disclose the identity of the people tied to ownership and the management of the property in writing. The objective is to make sure tenants always know exactly who holds authority over the unit.

Tenants must be legally provided with the names and addresses of:

  • The person authorized to manage the property (such as an external property management company or manager).
  • The owner of the premises, or a person officially authorized to act on behalf of the owner, to serve notices, process demands, and receive legal papers.

Why this matters: If an out-of-state landlord uses a local property manager, the tenant must be explicitly told who they can legally serve with a lawsuit or legally contact concerning vital maintenance requests.

2. Variable Security Deposit Standards

If a landlord handles more than four adjacent dwelling units on an identical premises and regulates separate security deposit formulas or requirements for different units, the landlord must disclose these varied criteria openly.

They can disclose this variable security deposit process by either:

  • Writing the differing standards dynamically into an upfront disclosure presented to the tenant prior to signing the lease agreement.
  • Clearly posting the differing standards within the management office or prominently on a public bulletin area on the property where they are inherently visible to all applicants.

Federal Mandates

Lead-Based Paint Disclosure

Under federal law enforced by the EPA and HUD, if a residential property was constructed prior to 1978, landlords are strictly obliged to notify the tenant about potential lead-based paint contamination.

Before a prospective tenant signs the lease, landlords must provide:

  1. An EPA-approved information pamphlet titled "Protect Your Family from Lead in Your Home."
  2. A Lead Warning Statement attached to the lease alongside detailed information pertaining to the presence of any known lead-based paint/hazards in the property.

Both landlords and tenants must mutually sign and date this disclosure form to recognize that the landlord met their compliance obligation.

Best Practices for Landlord Disclosures

  • Include Disclosures within the Lease: Add a custom addendum entirely devoted to statutory disclosures at the bottom of the master lease.
  • Obtain Signatures: Require signatures or digital initials on all separate disclosure policies—especially lead paint waivers—to establish written evidence of tenant receipt.
  • Maintain Current Agent Information: If you restructure your management firm, re-file who handles demands or update the tenants in writing within a 30-day timespan of making extreme changes to the management contacts.

How Landager Helps

A critical element of property management is verifying prospective tenants have reviewed required documentation before collecting a deposit. Landager allows landlords in South Carolina to build dynamic lease templates bundling all required state and federal disclosures for an applicant to e-sign in one intuitive workflow—guaranteeing flawless compliance every time.

Back to South Carolina Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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