📈 Rent Increase Calculator

Enter your current rent and increase type to see your new rent, annual gain, and the notice period required in your state.

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🗺️ State Notice Requirements
StateNotice RequiredRent Control / CapNotes
California30 days (<10%) / 90 days (≥10%)5% + CPI capAB 1482 limits increases for covered units
New York30–90 days (by lease length)Rent stabilized areasNYC rent stabilized units have strict rules
Oregon90 days7% + CPI capStatewide rent control for buildings 15+ yrs old
Washington60 daysNo capNo statewide rent control; notice increased to 60 days
Colorado60 days (21+ unit buildings)No capNo statewide rent control; local rules may vary
FloridaNo minimum requiredNo capNo statewide rent control; lease terms govern
TexasPer lease termsNo capNo statewide rent control; lease terms govern
ArizonaPer lease termsNo capState law prohibits local rent control
GeorgiaPer lease termsNo capNo statewide rent control
Illinois30 daysNo cap (Chicago varies)Chicago has additional tenant protections
AlabamaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlAlabama has no statewide rent control or required notice period beyond what your lease specifies.
Alaska30 days written notice (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlAlaska requires 30 days' notice for rent increases on month-to-month tenancies.
Arkansas30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlArkansas requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenants. Fixed-term leases are governed by the lease.
ConnecticutPer lease terms or reasonable noticeNo statewide rent controlConnecticut has no required notice period by statute — your lease governs. Some municipalities may have local protections.
Delaware60 days written noticeNo statewide rent controlDelaware requires 60 days' written notice for rent increases. One of the longer notice requirements in the eastern US.
District of Columbia30 days written noticeRent stabilization applies to most pre-1975 buildingsDC has robust rent stabilization. Buildings built before 1975 with 5+ units are generally covered. Always verify with DC DHCD.
Hawaii45 days written noticeNo statewide rent control (Maui County has local rules)Hawaii requires 45 days' notice. Maui County enacted temporary rent stabilization rules — verify current status locally.
IdahoPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlIdaho has no statewide rent control and no required statutory notice period beyond what your lease states.
IndianaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlIndiana has no statewide rent control or statutory notice requirement. Your lease governs.
Iowa30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlIowa requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent control.
Kansas30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlKansas requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month rental increases. No statewide rent caps.
Kentucky30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlKentucky requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No rent control statewide.
Louisiana10 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlLouisiana requires only 10 days' notice for month-to-month rent increases — one of the shortest requirements in the US.
Maine45 days written noticeNo statewide rent controlMaine requires 45 days' written notice for rent increases. No statewide rent control.
Maryland90 days written notice (some counties vary)No statewide cap (Montgomery County and some cities have local rules)Maryland requires 90 days' notice — among the longest in the country. Montgomery County has local rent stabilization. Verify local ordinances.
MassachusettsPer lease terms or reasonable noticeNo statewide rent control (Cambridge and some cities have local rules)Massachusetts has no statewide rent control, though some cities have local protections. Lease terms govern notice.
MichiganPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlMichigan has no statewide rent control or statutory notice requirement. Your lease governs the process.
MinnesotaNotice per lease termsNo statewide rent controlMinnesota has no statewide rent control. Some cities (St. Paul, Minneapolis) enacted local rent stabilization — verify locally.
Mississippi30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlMississippi requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No rent control.
MissouriPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlMissouri has no statewide rent control or required notice period. Your lease governs.
Montana15 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlMontana requires only 15 days' notice for month-to-month rent increases. No rent control.
Nebraska30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlNebraska requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent caps.
Nevada45 days written noticeNo statewide rent controlNevada requires 45 days' written notice for rent increases. No statewide rent control.
New Hampshire30 days written noticeNo statewide rent controlNew Hampshire requires 30 days' written notice for rent increases. No rent control.
New Jersey30 days written noticeLocal rent control in many cities — check your municipalityNew Jersey has local rent control in many cities including Newark, Jersey City, Hoboken, and others. Always check local ordinances.
New Mexico30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlNew Mexico requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent control.
North CarolinaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlNorth Carolina has no statewide rent control or required notice period beyond your lease terms.
North Dakota30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlNorth Dakota requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent control.
OhioPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlOhio has no statewide rent control or required statutory notice period. Your lease governs.
Oklahoma30 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlOklahoma requires 30 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent control.
PennsylvaniaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlPennsylvania has no statewide rent control or required notice period. Your lease governs.
Rhode Island30 days written noticeNo statewide rent controlRhode Island requires 30 days' written notice for rent increases. No statewide rent control.
South CarolinaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlSouth Carolina has no statewide rent control or required notice period. Your lease governs.
South DakotaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlSouth Dakota has no statewide rent control or required statutory notice period. Lease governs.
TennesseePer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlTennessee has no statewide rent control or required notice period beyond your lease terms.
Utah15 days (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlUtah requires 15 days' notice for month-to-month rent increases. No statewide rent control.
Vermont60 days written notice (for fixed-term renewal increases)No statewide rent controlVermont requires 60 days' notice for rent increases taking effect at lease renewal. No statewide rent control.
VirginiaNotice per lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlVirginia has no statewide rent control or required statutory notice period. Lease terms govern.
West VirginiaPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlWest Virginia has no statewide rent control or required notice period. Your lease governs.
Wisconsin28 days written notice (month-to-month)No statewide rent controlWisconsin requires 28 days' notice for month-to-month tenancies. No statewide rent control.
WyomingPer lease terms (no state minimum)No statewide rent controlWyoming has no statewide rent control or required notice period beyond your lease terms.
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When and How to Raise the Rent: A Strategic Guide for Landlords

Raising rent is one of the most important — and most anxiety-producing — decisions a landlord makes. Do it too aggressively and you lose a good tenant and face a costly turnover. Do it too timidly and you fall behind market rates, effectively subsidizing your tenant's housing costs out of your own cash flow. This guide walks through how to time a rent increase, how much to raise it, what notice you're required to give, and how to communicate the increase in a way that preserves the landlord-tenant relationship.

First: Know What the Market Is Actually Charging

Before deciding on a rent increase amount, find out what comparable units in your specific area are renting for today. Not what they were renting for when your current tenant moved in, and not what Zillow shows for a different neighborhood — the actual going rate for units that are similar to yours in your specific market right now.

Check current rental listings on Zillow, Apartments.com, Craigslist, and Facebook Marketplace. Look for units with similar square footage, bedroom count, and amenities in the same zip code or neighborhood. Call on a few listings if you want to confirm they're actually renting at the listed price, not just aspirationally priced. If comparable units are renting for $1,400 and you're charging $1,150, you have significant room to increase. If you're already at $1,350 and comparables are at $1,400, a modest $50 increase to stay competitive is reasonable, but pushing to $1,500 puts you above market and invites vacancy.

Notice Requirements by State

Every state requires landlords to provide advance written notice before a rent increase takes effect. The required notice period varies significantly by state and sometimes by the size of the increase:

For fixed-term leases, rent cannot be increased during the lease term unless the lease specifically allows for mid-term increases (rare). The increase takes effect at the start of the renewal term, and notice typically must be given before the lease expires — not at expiration.

Rent control and rent stabilization ordinances apply in some cities and can cap both the amount of an increase and when increases can be made. Cities with active rent control include Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York City, Portland, and a growing number of others. If your rental is in or near an urban area, verify whether local rent stabilization rules apply before issuing any increase notice.

How Much Is Too Much? Balancing Revenue and Retention

The math on rent increases often looks compelling on paper: a $150/month increase on a $1,400 unit is $1,800/year in additional revenue. But that analysis ignores the cost of the alternative scenario — a tenant who doesn't renew because the increase felt excessive. A vacancy in a typical rental unit costs the equivalent of one to three months' rent when you add up lost income, turnover cleaning, minor repairs, advertising, and the time required to screen and place a new tenant.

A useful framework: if your current tenant is good — pays on time, maintains the property reasonably, doesn't generate complaints or problems — the cost of losing them almost always exceeds the revenue from a large rent increase. Annual increases of 3–5% that track inflation and keep you at or slightly below market tend to produce the best long-term outcomes: tenants stay longer, turnover costs stay low, and rent revenue keeps pace with operating cost increases.

Reserve aggressive market-rate increases for situations where you're significantly below market with a problem tenant, a unit that's being renovated to a significantly higher standard, or a new tenancy where you're setting rent from scratch.

How to Communicate a Rent Increase

The way you communicate a rent increase affects how tenants receive it almost as much as the amount of the increase itself. A notice that arrives without context — just a formal letter stating the new rent — often feels arbitrary and impersonal, even when the amount is reasonable. A brief conversation or a well-written notice that acknowledges the relationship and explains the basis for the increase almost always goes better.

Include in your increase notice: the current rent amount, the new rent amount, the effective date, and a brief, genuine explanation. "Property taxes increased by 12% this year" or "I've kept your rent flat for three years while costs have climbed — this brings us to market rate" are honest, reasonable explanations that most tenants will accept. You don't owe an explanation legally, but providing one costs you nothing and preserves goodwill.

Rick's Take

Why I Don't Raise Rent Every Year — And When I Do

I have tenants I've worked with for eight, ten, twelve years. That kind of tenant relationship doesn't happen if you treat rent increases as an automatic annual event. My approach is to evaluate each tenancy individually at each renewal, not to apply a blanket policy across the portfolio.

For a long-term tenant who is responsible, treats the property well, and has a solid payment history: I typically don't raise the rent unless I'm meaningfully below market (more than 10–15% below comparable units nearby). The stability of a known, reliable tenant is worth more to me than the incremental revenue from a market-rate increase that could send them looking elsewhere.

For a newer tenancy, or when market rents have moved significantly: I bring the rent to market at renewal. I give the required notice, I explain why, and I give the tenant a fair amount of time to decide. Most good tenants understand that a reasonable market-rate adjustment after two or three years is fair. They may not love it, but they don't leave over it either — especially if they know finding a comparable unit will cost them more than the increase.

The landlords I've seen make the most money long-term aren't the ones who maximize rent on every cycle. They're the ones who minimize vacancy and turnover by keeping good tenants happy. That's the math that wins.

🏡
Rick Powell
Real Estate Investor & Licensed General Contractor · Detroit Metro Area · 40+ Years in Real Estate

Rick bought his first rental property in 1985 and has spent four decades evaluating, rehabbing, and managing rental properties — including hands-on work with distressed asset investors during the 2007 crisis. He built Rental Owner Calc to give landlords practical, no-fluff tools backed by real-world experience.