Security Deposits, Cleaning Fees & the New 2026 Rules
New state laws are rewriting what landlords can charge — and what tenants can recover. Here’s the definitive guide to move-out cleaning, “normal wear and tear,” and the new line between deposit deductions and illegal overcharges in 2026.
Protect Your Deposit
Know exactly what your landlord can — and absolutely cannot — charge you for.
Stay Legal & Profitable
Avoid the new 2026 penalties while still recovering legitimate cleaning costs.
Future-Proof Your Property
Whether you’ll rent out, sell, or list on Airbnb — the same rules apply.
In 2026, “normal wear and tear” is more clearly defined than ever — and landlords cannot deduct for routine cleaning, ordinary paint scuffs, faded carpet, or small nail holes. They can deduct for damage beyond normal use and for cleaning when the unit is “substantially less clean” than at move-in. The whole game now turns on one thing: documentation. Move-in photos, move-out photos, signed checklists, and itemized receipts. No documentation, no deduction.
🔥 2026 Law UpdateWhat Just Changed
2026 is the biggest year for tenant-landlord law in over a decade. Several states — most prominently Colorado with HB25-1249 — have rewritten what “normal wear and tear” means, banned automatic cleaning fees, and added real financial penalties for landlords who deduct without proper documentation. New York, New Jersey, Washington, and Ohio have all tightened their requirements as well.
For tenants, this is great news: your deposit is more protected than it’s ever been. For landlords, it’s a wake-up call: the old approach of “charge first, defend later” now exposes you to up to triple damages in several states. For homeowners considering renting out a property — or short-term hosting on Airbnb — these rules now apply to you whether you realize it or not.
⚖️ The Big 2026 Changes at a Glance
Automatic cleaning fees are dead in several states. Lease clauses saying “tenant agrees to pay $X cleaning fee at move-out” are now unenforceable. Routine cleaning on a “reasonably clean” unit cannot be charged. Documentation requirements now favor whichever side has photos, signed checklists, and itemized receipts — and that’s usually the prepared tenant, not the busy landlord.
The Critical Line: Wear & Tear vs. Damage
Every cleaning dispute in America ultimately comes down to this one question: is what the landlord is charging for “normal wear and tear” — or actual damage? Wear and tear is the landlord’s responsibility. Damage is the tenant’s. Here’s how courts in 2026 typically draw the line:
| Item | Normal Wear & Tear | Tenant Damage |
|---|---|---|
| Walls | Wear Small nail holes, minor scuffs, faded paint | Damage Large holes, crayon, unauthorized paint, smoke staining |
| Carpet | Wear Worn paths, light dirt, fading from sun | Damage Pet urine, burns, rips, set-in food stains |
| Hardwood Floors | Wear Minor scratches, finish dulling | Damage Deep gouges, water damage, missing planks |
| Kitchen / Oven | Wear Light residue, normal cooking discoloration | Damage Caked grease, burnt-on food, broken racks |
| Bathroom | Wear Light soap scum, grout aging | Damage Mold neglect, cracked tile, broken fixtures |
| Appliances | Wear Normal aging, minor cosmetic wear | Damage Broken from misuse, missing parts |
| Windows / Blinds | Wear Sun fading, slat aging | Damage Broken glass, ripped blinds, missing screens |
| Doors | Wear Loose handles, minor finish wear | Damage Holes, missing doors, broken hinges |
The carpet rule everyone misses: In several states, including Colorado, carpet older than 10 years cannot be charged to the tenant under any circumstances. The clock starts at installation — not at move-in.
What Landlords Can (and Cannot) Charge For
✓ Legitimate Deductions
- Unpaid rent owed under the lease
- Unpaid utilities listed in the lease
- Cleaning when unit is “substantially less clean” than move-in
- Repair of actual damage beyond normal wear
- Removal of items left behind (furniture, trash)
- Pet damage if not covered by pet deposit
- Re-keying if keys aren’t returned
- Pro-rated paint costs for damaged walls
✕ Illegal in 2026
- “Automatic” or flat cleaning fees
- Routine cleaning of a reasonably clean unit
- Repainting for minor scuffs or fading
- Carpet replacement if carpet is 10+ years old
- Standard nail holes from picture hanging
- Pre-existing damage from previous tenants
- “Improvement” upgrades to the property
- Cleaning without itemized receipts
The Complete Move-Out Cleaning Checklist
This is the same checklist professional turnover teams follow when preparing a rental to either return a full deposit or pass landlord inspection. Work through each zone in order; expect 4–8 hours for an average 2-bedroom done thoroughly.
Kitchen
- Deep clean oven inside, including racks and door glass
- Pull out fridge — clean behind, defrost, wipe interior
- Degrease range hood, filter, and burner area
- Empty cabinets — wipe inside and out, remove crumbs
- Scrub sink, disinfect, polish faucet
- Clean dishwasher filter and run with vinegar cycle
- Wipe baseboards, light fixtures, switches
Bathrooms
- Scrub grout lines and remove all mildew
- Descale showerhead and faucets
- Toilet — base, behind, bolts, and tank
- Clean exhaust fan grille and cover
- Polish mirrors and chrome
- Empty cabinets, wipe drawers
- Caulking touch-ups if peeling
Living Areas & Bedrooms
- Patch and paint any nail holes (use original paint if available)
- Dust all surfaces — ceiling fans, vents, fixtures, baseboards
- Clean inside windows, sills, and tracks
- Wipe doors, frames, knobs, and switches
- Vacuum closets, wipe shelves
- Steam clean carpets (often required by lease)
- Spot-treat any stains on walls
Floors
- Sweep and mop all hard floors
- Steam clean carpets professionally if required
- Remove any scuff marks from baseboards
- Clean transitions between rooms
- Address pet stains with enzymatic cleaner
- Spot-clean grout in tile floors
- Polish hardwood with appropriate cleaner
Exterior & Common Areas
- Sweep patio, balcony, or entryway
- Remove all personal items from storage
- Mow lawn if your responsibility
- Remove all trash and recyclables
- Clean garage if applicable
- Pressure wash if specified in lease
- Return any community amenity keys
The Documentation Step
- Photograph EVERY room after cleaning
- Include date/time stamps in metadata
- Video walkthrough — narrate condition aloud
- Compare side-by-side with move-in photos
- Send copies to yourself by email (timestamped)
- Get the landlord’s written acknowledgment
- Save all receipts from cleaning supplies/services
For Landlords: The Math on Professional Cleaning
Hiring a professional turnover team isn’t a cost — it’s an investment that pays back through faster turnovers, better documentation, and legally defensible cleaning standards.
Under the new 2026 rules, landlords who try to deduct without itemized professional receipts are in a much weaker position. A clear invoice from a licensed cleaning company specifying scope of work is now the gold standard of evidence. Our move-out cleaning service produces exactly that — itemized, photographed, scope-defined turnovers that survive any dispute.
How to Dispute a Cleaning Charge (Tenant Guide)
If you’ve received a deduction notice and you believe it’s improper, you have a clear legal pathway. The process is designed to be accessible without an attorney. Here’s the standard playbook:
Request the Itemized Statement & Receipts
Every state requires landlords to provide an itemized statement of deductions. If you didn’t receive one, that alone may be grounds to recover the full deposit. Request copies of every receipt for cleaning and repairs — in writing, by email. Save your request.
Compare Against Your Move-In Documentation
Pull out your move-in inspection checklist, photos, and the signed condition report. Any deduction for a pre-existing issue is invalid. If you don’t have move-in documentation, the legal burden shifts heavily — but you may still have options.
Send a Formal Demand Letter
Write a clear, factual letter listing each disputed deduction, your evidence, and the amount you’re requesting back. Cite your state’s security deposit statute. Send certified mail with return receipt. Most landlords settle here rather than face court.
File in Small Claims Court
If the landlord refuses to respond or settle, small claims court is designed for exactly this. Filing fees are typically $30–$75. No attorney required. Bring your photos, move-in checklist, demand letter, and the landlord’s itemized statement. Cases usually resolve in 30–90 days.
Pursue Statutory Penalties
Many states now allow tenants to recover 2× or 3× damages if the landlord acted in bad faith — meaning they knew or should have known the deduction was improper. Some states also award attorney fees and court costs. Ask the court to include statutory penalties when filing.
🔥 TrendingThe Airbnb Cleaning Fee Wars
Short-term rentals are now under their own scrutiny. Guests, regulators, and platforms are pushing back hard against the “$200 cleaning fee plus a 3-page checklist” model. Several cities and states have introduced fee transparency laws, and Airbnb itself now requires upfront total-price display.
The market is shifting toward professional, hands-off turnovers where hosts charge a reasonable cleaning fee, hire vetted teams, and skip the “guest cleaning checklist” entirely. Guests prefer it, reviews improve, and hosts free up their weekends. Our Airbnb & rental turnover service handles linen changes, staging, restocking, and same-day availability between bookings — exactly what high-rated hosts need.
How Long Does a Move-Out Clean Actually Take?
Realistic time expectations help both tenants planning their own clean and landlords scheduling professional turnovers:
| Property Size | DIY Time | Pro Team Time | Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | 3–4 hours | 2–3 hours | DIY if light cleaning |
| 1-Bedroom | 5–7 hours | 3–4 hours | Pro if deposit at risk |
| 2-Bedroom | 8–10 hours | 4–5 hours | Pro — better ROI |
| 3-Bedroom House | 12–16 hours | 5–7 hours | Pro almost always |
| 4+ Bedrooms | 16+ hours | 6–9 hours | Professional only |
The math gets compelling fast. A 2-bedroom DIY clean takes a full working day; a professional team handles it in half the time, leaves itemized receipts that protect both parties, and — for tenants — often pays for itself in deposit recovery alone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my landlord charge me for normal cleaning?
In most states as of 2026, no — not if the unit was returned in “reasonably clean” condition. Routine vacuuming, dusting, and surface wiping is considered normal turnover work and the landlord’s responsibility. Cleaning charges are only valid when the unit is “substantially less clean” than at move-in, with documented evidence.
I lived there for 5 years — can they charge me for paint?
Likely no. Most paint has a useful life of 2–3 years before normal repainting is expected. After 5 years, repainting is almost always landlord responsibility unless there’s actual damage (large holes, smoke staining, crayon, unauthorized colors). Pro-ration also applies: a landlord might only recover a fraction of the cost.
Is professional carpet cleaning required by law?
It depends on the state and lease. Many courts have ruled that “professional cleaning” clauses are unenforceable if the carpet only shows normal wear. However, if your lease specifically requires it AND the carpet shows excess soiling, you may be liable. The safest play is to hire a professional and keep the receipt.
What if my lease says “tenant pays $300 cleaning fee at move-out”?
In several 2026 states (Colorado being the biggest), these automatic fee clauses are now void and unenforceable. In other states, the fee is only valid if the unit actually requires cleaning beyond normal wear. Either way, you have grounds to challenge it.
I’m a landlord — should I hire a pro or use my own contractor?
Insured, vetted, professional cleaning services with itemized invoices are now the gold standard of legal defensibility. Your own contractor may be cheaper, but the documentation gap could cost you the entire deduction in court — or worse, statutory penalties of 2× or 3× the amount.
How quickly do I have to return the deposit?
Most states require 14–30 days after move-out. Some are stricter (New York: 14 days; New Jersey: 30 days; Colorado: 30–60 depending on lease). Missing the deadline can mean you forfeit the right to any deduction — and may owe 2× the wrongfully withheld amount.
Don’t Leave Money on the Table
Whether you’re moving out and want your deposit back, or you’re a landlord preparing a unit for the next tenant — our vetted professional teams handle move-out cleaning with the itemized documentation that protects you legally.