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Ohio State Law

Below is Ohio state landlord tenant code for OH. This is the ultimate source of truth for landlord tenant issues in the great state of Ohio. This is a large file but every other one we found online was jumbled up into numerous pages and hard to decipher. This should be easier to read and extract.

Ohio Landlord-Tenant Law

Complete verbatim statute text · 33 sections

📑 Table of Contents
General
O.R.C. § 5321.01 Landlord and Tenant Definitions O.R.C. § 5321.02 Retaliatory Action Prohibited O.R.C. § 5321.04 Landlord Obligations — Habitability and Maintenance O.R.C. § 5321.05 Tenant Obligations O.R.C. § 5321.07 Failure of Landlord — Tenant Remedies and Rent Escrow O.R.C. § 5321.11 Failure of Tenant — Landlord Remedies O.R.C. § 5321.13 Prohibited Lease Terms O.R.C. § 5321.14 Unconscionable Terms O.R.C. § 5321.15 Self-Help Eviction Prohibited — Tenant Remedies O.R.C. § 5321.16 Security Deposit — Return Requirements and Interest O.R.C. § 5321.17 Termination of Tenancy — Notice Periods O.R.C. § 5321.18 Written Rental Agreement Required Disclosures O.R.C. § 5321.19 Rent Control Preemption O.R.C. § 1923.01 Forcible Entry and Detainer — Jurisdiction and Definitions O.R.C. § 1923.02 Grounds for Eviction O.R.C. § 1923.04 Notice to Leave Premises — 3-Day Notice O.R.C. § 1923.05 Eviction Complaint Filing O.R.C. § 1923.06 Summons and Service of Process O.R.C. § 1923.051 Expedited Drug Eviction Procedures O.R.C. § 1923.061 Defenses and Counterclaims O.R.C. § 1923.062 Active Duty Military Protections O.R.C. § 1923.07 Default Judgment O.R.C. § 1923.08 Continuances O.R.C. § 1923.10 Trial by Jury O.R.C. § 1923.13 Writ of Execution — Restitution O.R.C. § 1923.14 Writ Execution and Property Disposal O.R.C. § 5321.051 Sex Offender Restrictions Near Schools O.R.C. § 5321.131 Flag Display Rights Late Fees Late Rent Fee Rules Abandoned Property Tenant Abandoned Property Lead Paint Disclosure Lead-Based Paint Disclosure Requirements Fair Housing Fair Housing Act Protections SCRA Servicemembers Civil Relief Act
O.R.C. § 5321.01

Landlord and Tenant Definitions

This section defines key terms: 'Tenant' means a person entitled under a rental agreement to the use and occupancy of residential premises to the exclusion of others. 'Landlord' means the owner, lessor, or sublessor of residential premises, or any authorized agent. 'Residential premises' means a dwelling unit for residential use and occupancy including the structure, facilities, appurtenances, and grounds. 'Security deposit' means any deposit of money or property to secure tenant performance. 'Rental agreement' means any agreement, written or oral, establishing terms of use and occupancy. 'Student tenant' means a person occupying college/university housing with rental agreement contingent on student status.
📝 Ohio Comment
Exclusions from coverage: prisons/jails/halfway houses; hospitals and nursing homes (Ch. 3721); hotels/motels/RV parks; boarding schools; orphanages; farm residences on 2+ acres for agricultural production; manufactured home parks under Ch. 3733; owner-occupied condos; certain SRO facilities operated by 501(c)(3) organizations; emergency shelters.
💡 General Comment
The governing statute for residential tenancies in Ohio. O.R.C. Chapter 5321 applies to most residential rentals. Chapter 1923 governs eviction (forcible entry and detainer) procedures.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2023-10-03
O.R.C. § 5321.02

Retaliatory Action Prohibited

A landlord may not retaliate against a tenant by increasing rent, decreasing services, or bringing or threatening eviction because: (1) the tenant complained to a governmental agency about a code violation materially affecting health and safety; (2) the tenant complained to the landlord about violations of § 5321.04; (3) the tenant joined with other tenants for collective negotiation with the landlord.
📝 Ohio Comment
Tenant remedies for retaliation: use as defense to eviction action; recover possession of premises; terminate the rental agreement; recover actual damages plus reasonable attorney's fees. Exception: landlord may increase rent to reflect cost of improvements or increased operating costs.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's anti-retaliation statute protects tenants who exercise legal rights. Unlike some states, Ohio does not specify a presumption period after which retaliation is no longer presumed.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1974-11-04
O.R.C. § 5321.04

Landlord Obligations — Habitability and Maintenance

A landlord shall: (1) comply with all applicable building, housing, health, and safety codes materially affecting health and safety; (2) make all repairs necessary to keep premises fit and habitable; (3) keep common areas safe and sanitary; (4) maintain electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, ventilating, AC fixtures and appliances, and elevators in good working order; (5) for 4+ units in same structure, provide waste receptacles and arrange removal; (6) supply running water, hot water, and heat (with exceptions); (7) not abuse right of entry; (8) give reasonable notice before entry (24 hours presumed reasonable); (9) promptly commence eviction for drug violations; (10) comply with Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.
📝 Ohio Comment
Entry violation remedies: If landlord makes unlawful entry, enters in unreasonable manner, or makes harassing demands for entry, tenant may recover actual damages, obtain injunctive relief, get reasonable attorney's fees, or terminate the rental agreement.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's implied warranty of habitability. Heat, hot water, and running water are required unless the building is not required by law to have them or the tenant controls the utility directly. The 24-hour notice before entry is a PRESUMPTION, not an absolute rule.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2012-09-28
O.R.C. § 5321.05

Tenant Obligations

A tenant shall: (1) keep occupied premises safe and sanitary; (2) dispose of all waste properly; (3) keep plumbing fixtures clean; (4) use electrical and plumbing fixtures properly; (5) comply with all applicable housing, health, and safety codes; (6) not damage or remove any fixture or appliance; (7) maintain appliances per written rental agreement; (8) conduct himself and require others on premises to not disturb neighbors' peaceful enjoyment; (9) not engage in drug violations under Chapters 2925 or 3719. Tenant shall not unreasonably withhold consent for landlord to enter for inspection, repairs, deliveries, services, or showings.
📝 Ohio Comment
Landlord remedies for violations: recover actual damages plus reasonable attorney's fees. This is in addition to rights to terminate rental agreement, maintain action for possession, or obtain injunctive relief. Drug violations trigger 3-day notice under § 5321.17(C).
💡 General Comment
Tenant responsibilities under Ohio law. The drug-free requirement in subsection (A)(9) is the only tenant obligation that cannot be assumed by the landlord under § 5321.13(F).
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1990-08-22
O.R.C. § 5321.07

Failure of Landlord — Tenant Remedies and Rent Escrow

If landlord fails to fulfill obligations under § 5321.04 (except drug enforcement), tenant may give written notice specifying the noncompliance. Notice sent to where rent is normally paid. If landlord fails to remedy within reasonable time considering severity or within 30 days (whichever is sooner), and tenant is current in rent, tenant may: (1) deposit all rent due and thereafter with clerk of municipal or county court; (2) apply to court for order directing landlord to remedy, with possible rent reduction or use of escrowed rent for repairs; (3) terminate the rental agreement.
📝 Ohio Comment
SMALL LANDLORD EXCEPTION: This section does NOT apply to landlords with rental agreements covering 3 or fewer dwelling units who provide written notice of that fact in the rental agreement or deliver written notice at initial occupancy. Also does not apply to student tenants.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's rent escrow remedy. The 30-day cure period or 'reasonable time' (whichever is shorter) gives landlords time to make repairs. Tenant must be CURRENT in rent to use this remedy. The small landlord exception (3 or fewer units) is significant.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1994-10-12
O.R.C. § 5321.11

Failure of Tenant — Landlord Remedies

If the tenant fails to fulfill any obligation under § 5321.05 that materially affects health and safety (other than drug violations), the landlord may deliver written notice specifying the noncompliance and stating the rental agreement will terminate on a date not less than 30 days after receipt of notice. If the tenant fails to remedy the condition, the agreement terminates as stated in the notice.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's 30-day cure-or-quit notice for material tenant violations affecting health and safety. Drug violations are handled separately under § 5321.17(C) with only a 3-day notice. The violation must MATERIALLY affect health and safety.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1990-08-22
O.R.C. § 5321.13

Prohibited Lease Terms

No provision of Chapter 5321 may be waived except landlord may agree to assume tenant obligations (other than drug-free requirement). PROHIBITED: (A) Confession of judgment clauses (warrant of attorney); (B) Attorney's fees clauses for either party; (C) Exculpatory or indemnification clauses limiting landlord liability; (D) Any agreement permitting receipt of rent without compliance with § 5321.04 landlord obligations. Landlord MAY assume tenant obligations under § 5321.05 except the drug-free requirement.
💡 General Comment
Void lease provisions in Ohio. Unlike many states, Ohio prohibits BOTH landlord and tenant attorney's fees clauses — neither party can contractually require the other to pay attorney's fees. Confession of judgment (cognovit) clauses are absolutely prohibited.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1990-08-22
O.R.C. § 5321.14

Unconscionable Terms

If the court finds a rental agreement or any clause unconscionable at the time it was made, the court may: refuse to enforce the agreement; enforce the remainder without the unconscionable clause; or limit application of any unconscionable clause to avoid unconscionable result. Parties shall be afforded reasonable opportunity to present evidence as to setting, purpose, and effect.
💡 General Comment
Court's equitable power to void unfair terms. This is a safety valve allowing courts to strike down grossly unfair provisions not specifically prohibited by § 5321.13.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1974-11-04
O.R.C. § 5321.15

Self-Help Eviction Prohibited — Tenant Remedies

No landlord shall initiate ANY act against a tenant (including one whose right to possession has terminated) for purpose of recovering possession other than through Chapters 1923, 5303, and 5321, including: termination of utilities or services; exclusion from premises (lockouts); threat of any unlawful act. No landlord shall seize furnishings or possessions for recovering rent except by court order. Violating landlord is liable for ALL damages caused to tenant plus reasonable attorney's fees.
💡 General Comment
Self-help eviction is strictly prohibited in Ohio. This includes lockouts, utility shutoffs, and seizing tenant property. The penalty is actual damages PLUS attorney's fees. Unlike some states, Ohio does not specify a separate punitive damages amount — actual damages may include consequential damages.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1974-11-04
O.R.C. § 5321.16

Security Deposit — Return Requirements and Interest

(A) Security deposit exceeding $50 or one month's rent (whichever greater) shall bear 5% annual interest on the excess if tenant remains in possession 6+ months, paid annually. (B) Upon termination, deposit may be applied to past due rent and damages from tenant noncompliance with § 5321.05 or rental agreement. Deductions must be ITEMIZED in writing and delivered within 30 DAYS after termination and delivery of possession. (C) Tenant MUST provide forwarding address in writing — failure to do so forfeits right to damages and attorney's fees. If landlord fails to comply, tenant may recover amount due plus damages equal to amount wrongfully withheld plus reasonable attorney's fees.
📝 Ohio Comment
OHIO HAS NO STATUTORY LIMIT on security deposit amount — landlord may charge any amount. However, interest requirement kicks in on amounts exceeding $50 or one month's rent after 6 months of tenancy.
💡 General Comment
Unlike most states, Ohio has NO cap on security deposit amount. The 5% interest requirement on excess amounts is unusual. The 30-day return deadline is strictly enforced. Tenant's failure to provide forwarding address is a complete defense for the landlord.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1974-11-04
O.R.C. § 5321.17

Termination of Tenancy — Notice Periods

(A) Week-to-week tenancy: either party may terminate with at least 7 days' notice prior to termination date. (B) Month-to-month tenancy: either party may terminate with at least 30 days' notice prior to the periodic rental date. (C) Drug violation: landlord shall terminate with 3 days' notice that tenancy terminates 3 days after notice; if tenant fails to vacate, landlord must promptly file eviction. (D) Does not apply to termination for breach of condition or duty (except drug violations).
💡 General Comment
Ohio's notice periods for ending periodic tenancies. The 30-day notice for month-to-month must be given before the PERIODIC RENTAL DATE (typically the 1st of the month). The 3-day drug violation notice is mandatory when landlord has knowledge of drug activity.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1990-08-22
O.R.C. § 5321.18

Written Rental Agreement Required Disclosures

Every written rental agreement SHALL contain: name and address of the owner; name and address of the owner's agent, if any. If owner or agent is a corporation, partnership, trust, or other entity, include the principal place of business in the county (or in the state if none in county) and the name of the person in charge. For ORAL agreements, landlord must deliver written notice with this information at commencement of occupancy. Failure to provide this information WAIVES the notice requirements under §§ 5321.07 and 5321.08.
💡 General Comment
Mandatory disclosure of owner and agent information. This is similar to Nevada's requirement. Failure to disclose waives the landlord's right to receive certain notices from tenant — a significant penalty.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1974-11-04
O.R.C. § 5321.19

Rent Control Preemption

No political subdivision may enact, adopt, renew, maintain, or enforce any charter provision, ordinance, resolution, rule, or other measure that conflicts with Chapter 5321 or that regulates landlord-tenant rights regulated by this chapter, including rent control or rent stabilization. Exceptions: housing/building/health/safety codes; publicly owned/operated housing; voluntary incentive programs to increase housing supply.
💡 General Comment
Ohio completely preempts local rent control. No city or county in Ohio may impose rent control or rent stabilization. This is broader than some state preemption laws. Limited exceptions for public housing and voluntary incentive programs.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2022-09-23
O.R.C. § 1923.01

Forcible Entry and Detainer — Jurisdiction and Definitions

Any judge of a county court, municipal court, or court of common pleas, within proper jurisdiction, may inquire about persons making unlawful and forcible entry into lands or tenements and detaining them, or making lawful entry but holding unlawfully by force. Actions must be brought within 2 YEARS after cause of action accrues. Defines: tenant, landlord, resident, residential premises, rental agreement, controlled substance, school premises, manufactured home park, park operator, minor tenant.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's eviction statute. Evictions in Ohio are filed as 'Forcible Entry and Detainer' actions in municipal court, county court, or common pleas court depending on location. The 2-year statute of limitations is generous compared to some states.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025-04-09
O.R.C. § 1923.02

Grounds for Eviction

Eviction may be brought against: (1) tenants holding over after term expires; (2) tenants under oral tenancy in default of rent; (3) judgment debtors in possession after execution sale; (4) parties after estate sales or partition; (5) occupiers without color of title where complainant has right of possession; (6) unlawful forcible detention including drug-related violations; (7) cases under land installment contracts (Ch. 5313); (8) tenants who breached health/safety obligations (after § 5321.11 notice); (9) tenants who breached written rental agreement; (10-12) manufactured home park residents in default or breach; (13) self-storage occupants; (14-15) sex offenders or tenants allowing sex offenders within 1000 feet of schools/childcare.
📝 Ohio Comment
Drug eviction: landlord has 'actual knowledge or reasonable cause to believe' if search warrant was executed, controlled substances found, and law enforcement informed landlord. Does not apply to student tenants under § 5321.031.
💡 General Comment
Comprehensive list of eviction grounds in Ohio. Note the specific provisions for sex offenders residing near schools — landlord may (but is not required to) evict. Drug violations have expedited procedures under § 1923.051.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2023-10-03
O.R.C. § 1923.04

Notice to Leave Premises — 3-Day Notice

Before commencing eviction action, landlord must notify tenant to leave premises at least 3 DAYS before filing, by: certified mail, return receipt requested; hand delivery of written notice in person; or leaving at defendant's usual place of abode or at the premises. Notice to recover residential premises MUST contain: 'You are being asked to leave the premises. If you do not leave, an eviction action may be initiated against you. If you are in doubt regarding your legal rights and obligations as a tenant, it is recommended that you seek legal assistance.'
📝 Ohio Comment
Service of 3-day drug notice under § 5321.17(C) satisfies this requirement. Service of notice under § 5313.06 (land contracts) also satisfies this requirement.
💡 General Comment
Ohio's 3-day notice to vacate is required BEFORE filing eviction. This is separate from any cure period. The required language must appear conspicuously on the notice. Unlike some states, Ohio allows service by leaving at premises.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2007-10-18
O.R.C. § 1923.05

Eviction Complaint Filing

Summons shall not issue until plaintiff files written complaint particularly describing the premises and setting forth unlawful and forcible entry/detention or unlawful detention after lawful entry. The complaint is copied into and made part of the record. NO MINOR TENANT may be listed as defendant if a parent or adult guardian is also listed on the same complaint. Court shall dismiss action listing minor as defendant when adult available and order plaintiff to pay minor's attorney fees.
💡 General Comment
Recent 2025 amendment adds protection for minor tenants — they cannot be named as defendants if an adult is available. This is a significant tenant protection not found in most states. The complaint must describe the specific premises.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025-04-09
O.R.C. § 1923.06

Summons and Service of Process

Service must be at least 7 DAYS before trial date. Summons to recover residential premises must state: eviction complaint filed; no one may be evicted in retaliation for exercising lawful rights; tenant may continue depositing rent with court; tenant may request jury trial; tenant has right to seek legal assistance and may contact legal aid. Service methods: ordinary mail to defendant's address PLUS one of: personal service at premises, leaving with person of suitable age at premises, or posting conspicuously on premises; OR certified mail return receipt requested. Answer day for other claims is 28 days from service.
💡 General Comment
Service must be completed at least 7 days before trial. Multiple service methods available. The required summons language explicitly mentions right to jury trial and legal aid — more extensive than many states. Service is complete when mail plus posting done, or when certified mail not returned by hearing date.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2007-10-18
O.R.C. § 1923.051

Expedited Drug Eviction Procedures

For drug-based evictions under § 1923.02(A)(6): summons served within 3 WORKING DAYS if possible; trial set NOT LATER than 30 DAYS after service; tenant NOT required to file answer (defenses presented at trial); NO CONTINUANCES permitted under § 1923.08; if tenant doesn't appear and properly served, court tries case under § 1923.07.
💡 General Comment
Fast-track eviction for drug violations. This is significantly faster than standard eviction — trial within 30 days with no continuances allowed. Tenant does not need to file written answer; defenses are presented orally at trial.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2003-07-31
O.R.C. § 1923.061

Defenses and Counterclaims

Any defense may be asserted at trial. In nonpayment actions where tenant is in possession, tenant may counterclaim for amounts recoverable under rental agreement or under Chapters 4781 (manufactured homes) or 5321. Court may order tenant to pay rent into court during case. After trial, party owed net judgment paid first from money in court. If no rent remains due after counterclaim applied, judgment entered for tenant in the possession action.
💡 General Comment
Tenant may raise any defense at trial without prior filing. Counterclaims for habitability violations or security deposit issues can be offset against rent owed. If counterclaim exceeds rent due, tenant wins the possession case.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2012-09-10
O.R.C. § 1923.062

Active Duty Military Protections

For tenant deployed on active duty whose ability to pay rent is materially affected, court may: stay proceedings for 90 days (or longer/shorter as justice requires); or adjust rental obligations to preserve interests of all parties. Court may grant landlord such equitable relief as required. Does NOT apply to landlords operating fewer than 4 residential premises.
💡 General Comment
Servicemember protections in eviction proceedings. The 90-day stay is discretionary but commonly granted. Small landlords (fewer than 4 units) are exempt from this provision. This supplements federal SCRA protections.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2005-05-18
O.R.C. § 1923.07

Default Judgment

If defendant does not appear and summons was properly served, the court shall try the cause as though defendant were present.
💡 General Comment
Eviction proceeds even if tenant fails to appear. Court still must find complaint true based on evidence presented. Proper service is prerequisite — defective service means no default judgment.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1987-03-17
O.R.C. § 1923.08

Continuances

No continuance shall be granted for a period longer than 8 DAYS unless: plaintiff applies for continuance and defendant consents; OR defendant applies and gives bond with good and sufficient surety, approved by court, conditioned for payment of rent that may accrue if judgment rendered against defendant.
💡 General Comment
Strict limits on eviction continuances in Ohio — maximum 8 days unless both parties agree or tenant posts bond for accruing rent. This keeps eviction proceedings moving quickly. Drug evictions under § 1923.051 allow NO continuances.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1987-03-17
O.R.C. § 1923.10

Trial by Jury

If a jury is demanded by either party, the jury shall be sworn to try and determine whether the complaint is true according to the evidence. General verdict against defendant if complaint true; for defendant if not true; or verdict stating facts found true if complaint partially true. In county court, party demanding jury must first deposit sufficient money for jury fee.
💡 General Comment
Either party has right to jury trial in Ohio eviction cases. Jury fee deposit required in county court. Jury determines factual issues; judge applies law. Many tenants do not request jury trial due to cost and delay.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 1987-03-17
O.R.C. § 1923.13

Writ of Execution — Restitution

Upon judgment of restitution, court issues writ of execution commanding officer to remove defendant and restore plaintiff to possession, and to levy costs. For manufactured home park evictions, writ includes authority for 14-day removal notice, county auditor valuation, and sale/destruction/title transfer based on home value (over/under $3,000 threshold).
💡 General Comment
The writ of restitution is executed by sheriff, police, constable, or bailiff depending on court type. Special procedures apply for manufactured homes which cannot simply be removed like personal property.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2017-09-29
O.R.C. § 1923.14

Writ Execution and Property Disposal

Writ shall be executed within 10 DAYS by sheriff, police officer, constable, or bailiff restoring plaintiff to possession and collecting costs. Stay of execution requires appeal filing AND bond with court. For manufactured homes: park operator not liable for removal/storage damage absent malice or bad faith; homes valued over $3,000 sold at auction within 60 days under Chapter 2329 procedures; homes valued $3,000 or less have title transferred to landlord within 30 days. Owner may redeem before sale by paying all costs, taxes, and court costs.
💡 General Comment
Physical eviction must occur within 10 days of writ issuance. Appeal with bond stays execution. Detailed procedures for manufactured homes including valuation by county auditor and either auction sale or title transfer depending on value.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2017-09-29
O.R.C. § 5321.051

Sex Offender Restrictions Near Schools

No tenant of residential premises within 1,000 feet of school premises, preschool, child care center, children's crisis care facility, or residential infant care center shall allow any person to occupy if that person's name appears on sex offender registry and was convicted of sexually oriented or child-victim oriented offense. If tenant allows such occupancy or person establishes residence in violation, landlord MAY terminate rental agreement. If landlord chooses not to terminate, landlord is NOT liable for resulting damages.
💡 General Comment
Landlord may (but is not required to) evict for sex offender violations. The 1,000-foot restriction applies to schools, preschools, childcare, and crisis care facilities. Landlord has no liability for choosing not to evict.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2023-10-03
O.R.C. § 5321.131

Flag Display Rights

No landlord shall prohibit display of: U.S. flag or POW/MIA flag (if displayed per 4 U.S.C. 5-10 and federal law); Ohio state flag (per state law); service flags for military family members (blue star, gold star banners). Tenant must give reasonable notice before installing flag pole or bracket and discuss placement, cost, installation, lighting, and appropriate size. Violation of this section is unconscionable term under § 5321.14. Tenant remains responsible to return premises in same condition at lease termination.
💡 General Comment
Tenants have right to display patriotic flags. Landlord cannot prohibit but can require reasonable notice and discussion about installation. Flag must be displayed according to federal flag code. Applies to both owned and rented premises.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2017-03-21
Late Fees

Late Rent Fee Rules

Ohio has NO STATUTORY CAP on late fees for residential rentals. Late fees must be: reasonable (courts typically accept 5-10% of monthly rent); clearly stated in the lease agreement; not constitute a penalty (must reflect actual landlord damages). Ohio does NOT require a grace period by state law — landlord may charge late fees immediately after due date if lease permits. Industry practice is typically 3-5 day grace period. Daily compounding fees are generally NOT upheld as reasonable by Ohio courts.
📝 Ohio Comment
LOCAL EXCEPTIONS: Dayton and Toledo cap late fees at 5% of rent or $25 (whichever is greater). Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati follow state rules with no local cap.
💡 General Comment
Unlike many states, Ohio has no statewide late fee cap or mandatory grace period. Reasonableness is determined by courts if challenged. Self-storage facilities under § 5322.05 have specific rules: 3-day grace period required, $20 or 20% late fee deemed reasonable.
Abandoned Property

Tenant Abandoned Property

Ohio has NO comprehensive state statute specifically governing abandoned tenant property. Best practices: (1) Complete formal eviction process to avoid self-help liability under § 5321.15; (2) Document all property left behind with written inventory and photographs; (3) Store property for at least 30 days (common practice); (4) Send written notice to tenant's last known address before disposal; (5) After notice period expires, property may be disposed of or sold; (6) Include abandonment procedures in lease agreement. Courts have held that lease clauses defining abandonment conditions provide some protection but are not absolute.
💡 General Comment
Self-help removal of tenant property without completing eviction exposes landlord to actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees under § 5321.15 and common law claims for conversion and trespass. Cleveland Code § 375.10 provides local definition of abandonment and requires 30-day storage.
Lead Paint Disclosure

Lead-Based Paint Disclosure Requirements

Federal law (Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act, Title X) requires for ALL residential properties built before 1978: (1) Provide tenants with EPA pamphlet 'Protect Your Family From Lead in Your Home'; (2) Disclose any known information about lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards; (3) Complete EPA-approved Lead Warning Statement/Disclosure form; (4) Have tenant sign disclosure acknowledging receipt; (5) Keep signed disclosure for at least 3 years. For renovations in pre-1978 housing disturbing painted surfaces, provide lead hazard information at least 60 days before work begins.
📝 Ohio Comment
PENALTIES: Failure to provide required disclosures can result in civil penalties up to $19,507 per violation (EPA) plus private lawsuits for damages. Ohio follows federal requirements. Some cities (Cleveland) have additional local lead-safe certification requirements for rental properties.
💡 General Comment
This is a FEDERAL requirement that applies in all states. Ohio has no separate state lead disclosure law but landlords must comply with federal Title X. Local ordinances in Cleveland require lead-safe certificates for rental properties.
Fair Housing

Fair Housing Act Protections

Federal Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq.) prohibits discrimination in housing based on: race, color, religion, national origin, sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation), familial status (families with children under 18), and disability. Landlords cannot: refuse to rent based on protected class; set different terms or conditions; provide different services or facilities; falsely deny availability; discriminate in advertising. Must provide reasonable accommodations for tenants with disabilities. Cannot refuse to rent to families with children to avoid lead paint liability.
💡 General Comment
Federal fair housing law applies in all states. Ohio Civil Rights Commission enforces state fair housing laws which mirror federal protections. Claims filed with HUD or Ohio Civil Rights Commission. Penalties include actual damages, injunctive relief, civil penalties up to $100,000+ for repeat violations.
SCRA

Servicemembers Civil Relief Act

Federal SCRA (50 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.) provides protections for active duty servicemembers including: right to terminate residential lease with 30 days' written notice upon receiving deployment orders or permanent change of station (PCS) orders; stay of eviction proceedings; protection from default judgments; interest rate cap of 6% on pre-service debts. Ohio law at O.R.C. § 5321.04(A)(10) requires landlord compliance with SCRA. Ohio § 1923.062 provides additional state-level protections including 90-day discretionary stay of eviction.
💡 General Comment
SCRA protections are in addition to state protections. Lease termination under SCRA is effective 30 days after next rent payment due date following proper notice. Landlord cannot charge early termination fee for SCRA termination. Service orders or deployment documentation required.

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