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4 Things Landlords Are Responsible For When Renting to Tenants

by theadvisertimes.com
3 months ago
in Markets
Reading Time: 9 mins read
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4 Things Landlords Are Responsible For When Renting to Tenants
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In This Article

This article is presented by Steadily.

Most real estate investors can tell you their ROI down to two decimal places. They can walk you through their expense ratio and their five-year appreciation projection without blinking.

But ask them about their landlord responsibilities? Silence. And that silence is expensive.

I’ve seen some version of this happen more times than I can count: A landlord spends weeks finding the right deal, negotiates a great price, gets their financing in order, and closes with confidence. Then, six months later, they are hit with a habitability complaint, a Fair Housing violation notice, or a liability claim they had no idea was coming. Not because they were reckless, but because nobody ever handed them a clear picture of what being a landlord actually requires.

This post is that picture. Think of it as a self-audit, a plain-English walkthrough of the four categories of landlord responsibility that determine whether your investment is truly protected or just looks that way on paper. 

Responsibility No. 1: Habitability

The moment a tenant signs a lease, you are legally bound by something called the Warranty of Habitability. You do not have to write it into the contract, it is implied by law in virtually every state. And it says one thing clearly: the property you are renting out must meet basic safety and living standards before and throughout the tenancy.

What does that actually mean in practice? Habitability covers more ground than most landlords assume. At a minimum, you are responsible for:

Structural integrity. Foundation, walls, roof, windows, and doors must be sound and secure.

Working systems. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC must function. In states like Arizona, functional air conditioning is a legal requirement due to heat risk.

Pest control. Infestations are your problem to solve, not the tenant’s.

Mold remediation. If there is mold, you must address both the mold and the moisture source causing it.

Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors. Each state sets specific requirements for quantity and placement.

Common area safety. Stairwells, parking lots, laundry rooms, and shared spaces need proper lighting, secure handrails, and maintained conditions.

The self-audit question that guides you should be: when did someone last physically inspect each of those items at your property?

If the answer is “I am not sure,” that is a gap. And when a habitability complaint hits, “I am not sure” does not hold up in front of a judge. Tenants have legal remedies that range from withholding rent to terminating the lease to suing for damages. The cost of a single habitability lawsuit dwarfs the cost of a quarterly inspection.

Responsibility No. 2: Ongoing Property Maintenance

Habitability may be the legal floor, but maintenance is what keeps you from falling through it.

A lot of landlords treat maintenance as purely reactive. Something breaks; they fix it. That approach is not wrong exactly, it is just incomplete. And incomplete maintenance habits are one of the fastest ways to turn a small issue into an expensive insurance claim – or worse, an uninsured one.

The thing insurance companies know that most landlords do not is that a high percentage of claims are traceable to deferred maintenance. A roof leak that started as a missing shingle, a water damage claim that began with a clogged gutter three seasons ago, or a liability lawsuit from a cracked walkway that someone pointed out in a maintenance request eight months earlier. These are all common and costly maintenance errors.

Your ongoing maintenance obligations go beyond fixing things when tenants call. They include:

Paying the mortgage on time. Obvious, but worth stating. At 90 days past due, foreclosure can begin.

Managing utilities. Any utility in your name must be paid. Some municipalities can place liens on your property for unpaid utility bills.

Scheduling preventive maintenance. HVAC servicing, roof inspections, gutter cleaning, dryer vent cleaning, and exterior walk-throughs should be on a calendar, not waiting for a problem.

Documenting everything. Invoices, photos, and inspection reports. This documentation is your evidence that you operated the property responsibly. Without it, you have no defense.

The self-audit question here is direct: Do you have a scheduled maintenance calendar for each property, or are you operating on a “wait and see” basis?

Proactive maintenance does two things for you: it preserves the asset, and it builds a documented track record that protects you when something goes sideways despite your best efforts.

Responsibility No. 3: Legal Compliance

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This is the category most landlords underestimate, and unfortunately, it is also the one with the steepest penalties.

Legal compliance in property management is not just about avoiding evictions. It covers how you advertise, how you screen, how you handle money, and how you communicate. Get any of it wrong, and you are looking at fines, lawsuits, or both.

The Fair Housing Act

The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in the rental process based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and disability. Violations do not have to be intentional. An ad that says “great for young professionals” can be read as discriminating against families. A policy that bans all pets without a written exemption process for emotional support animals violates the FHA’s disability clause.

First-offense civil penalties can reach $16,000. Repeat violations climb fast. And HUD complaints are not rare.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act

Every time you run a background check, credit check, or pull rental history on an applicant, you are operating under FCRA rules. You must get written permission before running reports. You must protect that data. And if you deny an applicant based on what you found, you must provide a standardized adverse action notice explaining why.

Skipping that step is not just sloppy; it’s a federal violation.

Security deposits, lead paint, and right-to-entry

Security deposits are governed differently in every state. Some states cap the amount at one or two months’ rent. Many require the deposit to be held in a separate account. Most set a deadline for returning funds after move-out, typically 14 to 60 days. Miss that deadline or make improper deductions, and you may owe the tenant two or three times the original deposit.

If your property was built before 1978, you are required by federal law to provide every tenant with a lead paint disclosure before they sign – no exceptions.

Right-to-entry rules also vary by state. Some require 24 hours’ notice before you can enter for a non-emergency. Others require 48 or 72 hours. A few states allow landlords to enter without warning under certain circumstances. Entering without proper notice, even for legitimate maintenance, can give a tenant legal grounds to break the lease.

Self-audit question: When did you last review your lease language and screening process against current federal and state law?

Responsibility No. 4: State-Specific Rules That Change Everything

Here is something that catches out-of-state investors especially hard: what is perfectly legal landlord behavior in one state is a violation in the next one.

Arkansas allows landlords to enter a property without prior notice. California requires a minimum of 24 hours. Kentucky caps small claims court at $2,500. Delaware allows up to $25,000. Some states require security deposits to earn interest. Others have no such rule. Eviction timelines, late fee limits, rent increase notice periods, and move-out inspection requirements all differ by state, and sometimes by city within a state.

If you own property in more than one market, you cannot apply the same playbook across all of them. And if you have not checked whether your state updated its landlord-tenant statutes recently, you may already be out of compliance without knowing it.

The self-audit question: Do you have a current, state-specific understanding of your obligations for every market where you own property?

If the answer is no, that is not unusual. But it is a real gap. Start with your state’s landlord-tenant statutes and run them against your current lease and operating procedures. Bring in a local real estate attorney if anything is unclear.

You Can Do Everything Right and Still Take a Hit

So you ran the self-audit. You checked the habitability boxes. Your maintenance is scheduled and documented. Your lease is compliant with state and federal law. You know your right-to-entry rules and your security deposit deadlines.

That is genuinely solid. Most landlords are not operating at that level.

But here is the part nobody likes to say out loud: Compliance and maintenance reduce your risk, but they do not eliminate it.

A tenant gets injured despite your best efforts. A storm causes damage that your standard homeowners policy does not cover because the property is a rental. You lose three months of rent while a vacancy drags on after a covered loss. A vendor working on your property files a claim, and the liability boomerangs back to you.

These scenarios happen to landlords who did everything right. And when they do, the financial exposure lands directly on the property owner, not the tenant, not the property manager, not the city.

That is exactly where your insurance strategy has to close the gap that compliance alone cannot.

And if you are still carrying a standard homeowners policy on a rental property, I want to be direct with you: that policy was not written for landlords. It does not cover loss of rent. It may not cover tenant-caused damage. Perhaps most importantly in the context of this article, it does not cover liability claims that come from tenants. 

Homeowners insurance was built for owner-occupants, not investors. This is the gap that Steadily was built to fill.

Steadily is landlord insurance coverage designed specifically for real estate investors. Not adapted from a homeowner product, nor pieced together from commercial lines. The products are built from the ground up for people who own rental properties and need coverage that actually matches how they operate.

Here is what that means practically:

Loss of rent coverage. If a covered event makes your property uninhabitable, Steadily helps replace the rental income you lose while repairs are underway.

Liability protection. If a tenant or guest is injured on your property, your landlord policy covers legal costs and damages in ways a standard homeowners policy may not.

Property damage coverage. Fire, storms, vandalism, and more, with coverage calibrated for rental properties, not owner-occupied homes.

Coverage for all rental types. Single-family homes, multifamily, and short-term rentals like Airbnb. Steadily covers them all nationwide.

Fast quotes with no paperwork nightmare. Investors can get a quote in minutes, not days. Whether you own one door or fifty, the process is built to move at the pace of your business.

Think about it this way. You just ran a checklist of your four core landlord responsibilities. You identified where your systems are solid and where the gaps are. That same mindset needs to apply to your insurance. When did you last audit your coverage the same way you just audited your compliance?

Most landlords have not. They got a policy when they bought the property and have not looked at it since. That is fine when nothing goes wrong. When something does, that is when the policy details matter.

Steadily makes that audit easy. Their team works specifically with real estate investors, which means they understand what you are protecting and can match your coverage to your actual risk profile, not a generic homeowner template.

Time to Close the Final Gap

You have done the work on compliance. Now do the same for your coverage. Get a fast, free landlord insurance quote from Steadily today at Steadily.com. It takes five minutes. And it might be the most important thing you do for your portfolio this quarter.



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