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Washington State Law

Below is Washington state landlord tenant code for WA. This is the ultimate source of truth for landlord tenant issues in the great state of North Carolina. 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.

Washington Landlord-Tenant Law

Complete verbatim statute text · 78 sections

📑 Table of Contents
General
RCW 59.18.010 Short Title RCW 59.18.020 Rights and Remedies—Obligation of Good Faith Imposed RCW 59.18.030 Definitions RCW 59.18.040 Living Arrangements Exempted from Chapter RCW 59.18.050 Jurisdiction of District and Superior Courts RCW 59.18.055 Notice—Alternative Service Procedure RCW 59.18.057 Notice—Form (14-Day Pay or Vacate) RCW 59.18.058 Notice—Translated Versions—Legal or Advocacy Resource Information RCW 59.18.060 Landlord—Duties RCW 59.18.063 Landlord—Written Receipts for Payments Made by Tenant RCW 59.18.065 Landlord—Copy of Written Rental Agreement to Tenant RCW 59.18.070 Landlord—Failure to Perform Duties—Notice from Tenant—Time Limits for Remedial Action RCW 59.18.075 Seizure of Illegal Drugs—Notification of Landlord RCW 59.18.080 Payment of Rent Condition to Exercising Remedies—Exceptions RCW 59.18.085 Rental of Condemned or Unlawful Dwelling—Tenant's Remedies—Relocation Assistance RCW 59.18.090 Landlord's Failure to Remedy Defective Condition—Tenant's Choice of Actions RCW 59.18.100 Landlord's Failure to Carry Out Duties—Repairs Effected by Tenant—Deduction of Cost from Rent RCW 59.18.110 Failure to Carry Out Duties—Judgment for Diminished Rental Value and Repair Costs RCW 59.18.115 Substandard and Dangerous Conditions—Rent Escrow Account RCW 59.18.120 Defective Condition—Unfeasible to Remedy—Termination of Tenancy RCW 59.18.125 Inspections by Local Municipalities—Frequency—Certificate of Inspection RCW 59.18.130 Duties of Tenant RCW 59.18.140 Reasonable Obligations—Landlord's Duty to Provide Written Notice of Rent Increase RCW 59.18.150 Landlord's Right of Entry—Conditions RCW 59.18.160 Landlord's Remedies If Tenant Fails to Remedy Defective Condition RCW 59.18.170 Landlord to Give Notice If Tenant Fails to Carry Out Duties—Late Fees RCW 59.18.180 Tenant's Failure to Comply with Statutory Duties—Landlord's Remedies RCW 59.18.190 Notice to Tenant to Remedy Nonconformance RCW 59.18.200 Tenancy from Month to Month—End of Tenancy—Notice RCW 59.18.210 Tenancies from Year to Year Except Under Written Contract RCW 59.18.220 End of Tenancy for a Specified Time—Armed Forces Exception RCW 59.18.230 Waiver of Chapter Provisions Prohibited—Provisions Prohibited from Rental Agreement RCW 59.18.240 Reprisals or Retaliatory Actions by Landlord—Prohibited RCW 59.18.250 Reprisals or Retaliatory Actions by Landlord—Presumptions—Rebuttal—Costs RCW 59.18.253 Deposit to Secure Occupancy—Holding Deposits—Landlord's Duties RCW 59.18.255 Source of Income—Landlords Prohibited from Discrimination RCW 59.18.257 Screening of Prospective Tenants—Notice—Comprehensive Reusable Screening Report RCW 59.18.260 Security Deposit—Written Rental Agreement and Checklist Required RCW 59.18.270 Security Deposit—Deposit in Trust Account—Receipt Required RCW 59.18.280 Security Deposit—Statement and Notice of Basis for Retention—Remedies for Failure to Refund RCW 59.18.283 Moneys Paid by Tenant—Landlord Must Apply Toward Rent—Installment Payment Plans RCW 59.18.285 Nonrefundable Fees—Not to be Designated as Deposit—Written Agreement Required RCW 59.18.290 Removal or Exclusion of Tenant—Illegal Lockouts—Attorneys' Fees RCW 59.18.300 Termination of Tenant's Utility Services—Prohibition RCW 59.18.310 Default in Rent—Abandonment—Liability of Tenant—Landlord's Remedies RCW 59.18.312 Writ of Restitution—Storage and Sale of Tenant's Property RCW 59.18.315 Mediation of Disputes by Independent Third Party RCW 59.18.320 Arbitration—Authorized—Exceptions—Notice—Procedure RCW 59.18.352 Threatening Behavior by Tenant—Termination of Agreement RCW 59.18.354 Threatening Behavior by Landlord—Termination of Agreement RCW 59.18.360 Exemptions from Certain Provisions by Written Agreement RCW 59.18.365 Unlawful Detainer Action—Summons—Form RCW 59.18.367 Unlawful Detainer Action—Limited Dissemination Authorized RCW 59.18.368 Unlawful Detainer Action—Residential Tenancies—Housing Court Commissioners RCW 59.18.370 Forcible Entry or Detainer or Unlawful Detainer Actions—Writ of Restitution—Application—Show Cause Hearing RCW 59.18.410 Unlawful Detainer Actions—Judgment—Execution—Reinstatement of Tenancy RCW 59.18.412 Forcible or Unlawful Detainer Proceeding—Remote Hearings RCW 59.18.430 Applicability to Prior, Existing or Future Leases RCW 59.18.440 Relocation Assistance for Low-Income Tenants—Local Government Authority RCW 59.18.500 Gang-Related Activity—Legislative Findings RCW 59.18.510 Gang-Related Activity—Notice and Demand—Petition to Court RCW 59.18.550 Drug and Alcohol Free Housing—Program of Recovery RCW 59.18.570 Victim Protection—Definitions RCW 59.18.575 Victim Protection—Notice to Landlord—Termination of Rental Agreement—Procedures RCW 59.18.580 Victim Protection—Limitation on Tenant Screening Service Provider Disclosures RCW 59.18.585 Victim Protection—Possession of Dwelling Unit—Exclusion of Others—New Lock or Key RCW 59.18.590 Death of a Tenant—Designated Person RCW 59.18.595 Death of a Tenant—Landlord Duties—Disposition of Property Procedures RCW 59.18.610 Installments—Deposits, Nonrefundable Fees, and Last Month's Rent RCW 59.18.640 Indigent Tenants—Right to Counsel in Eviction Proceedings RCW 59.18.650 Eviction of Tenant—Just Cause Required—Notice—Penalties RCW 59.18.670 Security Deposit—Landlord Waiver, Disclosure Form—Fee in Lieu RCW 59.18.700 Landlord—Prohibition on Certain Rent Increases—Notice—Enforcement—Penalties RCW 59.18.710 Landlord—Prohibition on Certain Rent Increases—Exemptions RCW 59.18.720 Landlord—Notice of Rent Increases—Form RCW 59.18.730 Online Landlord Resource Center RCW 59.18.900 Severability—1973 1st ex.s. c 207 RCW 59.18.912 Construction—Chapter Applicable to State Registered Domestic Partnerships
RCW 59.18.010

Short Title

RCW 59.18.010 through 59.18.420 and 59.18.900 shall be known and may be cited as the "Residential Landlord-Tenant Act of 1973", and shall constitute a new chapter in Title 59 RCW.
💡 General Comment
This chapter is Washington's primary residential landlord-tenant statute, originally enacted in 1973 and significantly amended through 2025.
RCW 59.18.020

Rights and Remedies—Obligation of Good Faith Imposed

Every duty under this chapter and every act which must be performed as a condition precedent to the exercise of a right or remedy under this chapter imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance or enforcement.
💡 General Comment
Every duty and remedy under the RCW 59.18 chapter must be carried out in good faith by both landlords and tenants.
RCW 59.18.030

Definitions

As used in this chapter: (1) "Active duty" means service authorized by the president of the United States, the secretary of defense, or the governor for a period of more than 30 consecutive days. (2) "Certificate of inspection" means an unsworn statement, declaration, verification, or certificate made in accordance with chapter 5.50 RCW by a qualified inspector that states that the landlord has not failed to fulfill any substantial obligation imposed under RCW 59.18.060 that endangers or impairs the health or safety of a tenant. (3) "Commercially reasonable manner," with respect to a sale of a deceased tenant's personal property, means a sale where every aspect of the sale, including the method, manner, time, place, and other terms, must be commercially reasonable. (4) "Comprehensive reusable tenant screening report" means a tenant screening report prepared by a consumer reporting agency at the direction of and paid for by the prospective tenant and made available directly to a prospective landlord at no charge, which contains: (a) a consumer credit report within the past 30 days; (b) the prospective tenant's criminal history; (c) eviction history; (d) employment verification; and (e) address and rental history. (10) "Dwelling unit" is a structure or part of a structure used as a home, residence, or sleeping place by one or more persons maintaining a common household. (16) "Landlord" means the owner, lessor, or sublessor of the dwelling unit or property, and any person designated as representative including an agent, resident manager, or designated property manager. (29) "Rent" or "rental amount" means recurring and periodic charges identified in the rental agreement for the use and occupancy of the premises, which may include charges for utilities, but does not include nonrecurring charges for late payment, damages, deposits, legal costs, or other fees. (30) "Rental agreement" or "lease" means all agreements which establish or modify the terms, conditions, rules, regulations, or any other provisions concerning the use and occupancy of a dwelling unit. (34) A "tenant" is any person entitled to occupy a dwelling unit primarily for living or dwelling purposes under a rental agreement. (39) "Wear resulting from ordinary use of the premises" means deterioration that results from the intended use of a dwelling unit, including breakage or malfunction due to age or deteriorated condition, but does not include deterioration from negligence, carelessness, accident, or abuse.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's definition of 'rent' explicitly excludes late fees, deposit charges, and legal fees — landlords cannot serve pay-or-vacate notices for amounts other than rent. Amended through 2023.
💡 General Comment
Defines all key terms used throughout the chapter including landlord, tenant, dwelling unit, rent, and wear from ordinary use.
RCW 59.18.040

Living Arrangements Exempted from Chapter

The following living arrangements are not intended to be governed by the provisions of this chapter, unless established primarily to avoid its application: (1) Residence at an institution where residence is incidental to detention or provision of medical, religious, educational, recreational, or similar services including correctional facilities, licensed nursing homes, monasteries and convents, and hospitals; (2) Occupancy under a bona fide earnest money agreement to purchase or contract of sale; (3) Occupancy under a written rental agreement entered into by a seller and buyer of a dwelling unit for the seller to retain possession for no more than three months after closing; (4) Residence in a hotel, motel, or other transient lodging; (5) Rental agreements under chapter 47.12 RCW for owner-condemnees; (6) Single-family residence rentals incidental to leases of land used primarily for agricultural purposes; (7) Housing for seasonal agricultural employees while provided in conjunction with such employment; (8) Rental agreements with the state of Washington, department of natural resources, on public lands under Title 79 RCW; (9) Occupancy by an employee of a landlord whose right to occupy is conditioned upon employment in or about the premises.
💡 General Comment
Lists nine exemptions from the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act, including institutional residences, hotel/motel stays, agricultural worker housing, and certain owner-occupant situations.
RCW 59.18.050

Jurisdiction of District and Superior Courts

The district or superior courts of this state may exercise jurisdiction over any landlord or tenant with respect to any conduct in this state governed by this chapter or with respect to any claim arising from a transaction subject to this chapter within the respective jurisdictions of the district or superior courts as provided in Article IV, section 6 of the Constitution of the state of Washington.
💡 General Comment
Both district courts and superior courts have jurisdiction over Washington landlord-tenant disputes.
RCW 59.18.055

Notice—Alternative Service Procedure

When the landlord, after the exercise of due diligence, is unable to personally serve the summons on the tenant, the landlord may use the alternative means of service as follows: (a) The summons and complaint shall be posted in a conspicuous place on the premises not less than nine days from the return date stated in the summons; and (b) copies shall be deposited in the mail, postage prepaid, by both regular mail and certified mail directed to the tenant's last known address not less than nine days from the return date. When service is accomplished by this alternative procedure, the court's jurisdiction is limited to restoring possession of the premises; no money judgment may be entered until jurisdiction over the tenant is obtained. The exercise of due diligence requires at least three personal service attempts over not less than two days and at different times of the day.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires at least 3 personal service attempts on 2 different days before alternative (post-and-mail) service is permitted.
💡 General Comment
Establishes the alternative service procedure for summons when personal service cannot be accomplished despite due diligence.
RCW 59.18.057

Notice—Form (14-Day Pay or Vacate)

Every 14-day notice served pursuant to RCW 59.12.030(3) must be in substantially the following form: "FOURTEEN-DAY NOTICE TO PAY RENT OR VACATE THE PREMISES. You are receiving this notice because the landlord alleges you are not in compliance with the terms of the lease agreement by failing to pay rent and/or utilities and/or recurring or periodic charges that are past due. TOTAL AMOUNT DUE: $[dollar amount]. You must pay the total amount due to your landlord within fourteen (14) days after service of this notice or you must vacate the premises. Any payment you make to the landlord must first be applied to the total amount due as shown on this notice." The notice must include information about legal resources, the Eviction Defense Screening Line (855-657-8387), and the Attorney General's website at www.atg.wa.gov/landlord-tenant.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires a specific statutory form for the 14-day pay or vacate notice. Using a non-conforming form is grounds to dismiss the eviction. The form must include tenant resource and legal aid contact information.
💡 General Comment
Mandates the exact form language required for Washington's 14-day pay-or-vacate notice, including required tenant legal resource information.
RCW 59.18.058

Notice—Translated Versions—Legal or Advocacy Resource Information

The office of the attorney general shall produce and maintain on its website translated versions of the notice under RCW 59.18.057 in the top ten languages spoken in Washington state. The notice must be made available upon request in printed form on one letter size paper in an easily readable font size. The office of the attorney general shall also provide on its website information on where tenants can access legal or advocacy resources, including information on any immigrant and cultural organizations where tenants can receive assistance in their primary language.
💡 General Comment
Requires the Washington AG to maintain translated versions of the 14-day notice in the state's top 10 languages and publish tenant legal resources.
RCW 59.18.060

Landlord—Duties

The landlord will at all times during the tenancy keep the premises fit for human habitation, and shall in particular: (1) Maintain the premises to substantially comply with any applicable code, statute, ordinance, or regulation governing their maintenance or operation; (2) Maintain the structural components including roofs, floors, walls, chimneys, fireplaces, foundations, and all other structural components, in reasonably good repair; (3) Keep any shared or common areas reasonably clean, sanitary, and safe; (4) Provide a reasonable program for the control of infestation by insects, rodents, and other pests at the initiation of the tenancy; (5) Make repairs necessary to keep the premises in as good condition as at commencement of the tenancy; (6) Provide reasonably adequate locks and furnish keys; (7) Maintain all electrical, plumbing, heating, and other facilities and appliances in reasonably good working order; (8) Maintain the dwelling unit in reasonably weathertight condition; (11) Provide facilities adequate to supply heat and water and hot water as reasonably required by the tenant. The landlord may not effect an involuntary termination of electric utility or water service due to lack of payment on any day for which the national weather service has issued or announced a heat-related alert. Upon tenant request during a heat-related alert, the landlord shall promptly make a reasonable attempt to reconnect service, and may require a repayment plan not to exceed six percent of the tenant's monthly income per month; (12) Provide a written notice to all tenants disclosing fire safety and protection information; (13) Provide tenants with information from the department of health about health hazards associated with exposure to indoor mold; (15) Designate to the tenant the name and address of the person who is the landlord.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington added the heat-related alert utility reconnection requirement effective 2023. Landlords cannot cut off electric or water service during extreme heat warnings. Repayment plans for reconnection must cap monthly payments at 6% of tenant income.
💡 General Comment
Sets out all landlord habitability and maintenance duties, including the 2023 addition prohibiting utility disconnection during heat-related alerts.
RCW 59.18.063

Landlord—Written Receipts for Payments Made by Tenant

A landlord must accept a personal check, cashier's check, or money order for any payment of rent made by a tenant, except that a landlord is not required to accept a personal check from any tenant that has had a personal check returned for nonsufficient funds or account closure within the previous nine months. A landlord must also allow for the tenant to submit a rental payment by mail unless the landlord provides an accessible, on-site location. A landlord may refuse to accept cash, but shall provide a receipt for any cash payment accepted. A landlord shall provide, upon the request of a tenant, a written receipt for any payments made in a form other than cash.
💡 General Comment
Requires landlords to accept personal checks, cashier's checks, and money orders; allows mail payment; requires written receipts on request.
RCW 59.18.065

Landlord—Copy of Written Rental Agreement to Tenant

When there is a written rental agreement for the premises, the landlord shall provide an executed copy to each tenant who signs the rental agreement. The tenant may request one free replacement copy during the tenancy.
💡 General Comment
Landlord must provide each signing tenant with an executed copy of the written rental agreement; tenant may request one free replacement copy.
RCW 59.18.070

Landlord—Failure to Perform Duties—Notice from Tenant—Time Limits for Remedial Action

If at any time during the tenancy the landlord fails to carry out the duties required by RCW 59.18.060 or by the rental agreement, the tenant may deliver written notice to the person designated in RCW 59.18.060(15), or to the person who collects the rent, which notice shall specify the premises involved, the name of the owner, if known, and the nature of the defective condition. The landlord shall commence remedial action after receipt of such notice as soon as possible but not later than: (1) Not more than twenty-four hours, where the defective condition deprives the tenant of hot or cold water, heat, or electricity, or is imminently hazardous to life; (2) Not more than seventy-two hours, where the defective condition deprives the tenant of the use of a refrigerator, range and oven, or a major plumbing fixture supplied by the landlord; and (3) Not more than ten days in all other cases.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's repair timelines are: 24 hours for loss of heat/water/electricity or imminent life hazard; 72 hours for major appliances; 10 days for all other defects.
💡 General Comment
Sets three-tier repair timeline: 24 hours for critical utilities/life-safety, 72 hours for major appliances, 10 days for all other defects.
RCW 59.18.075

Seizure of Illegal Drugs—Notification of Landlord

Any law enforcement agency which seizes a controlled substance pursuant to a violation of chapter 69.50 RCW shall make a reasonable attempt to discover the identity of the landlord and shall notify the landlord in writing, at the last address listed in the property tax records, of the seizure and the location of the seizure of the illegal drugs or substances. Any law enforcement agency which arrests a tenant for threatening another tenant with a firearm or other deadly weapon, or for some other unlawful use of a firearm or other deadly weapon on the rental premises, or for physically assaulting another person on the rental premises, shall make a reasonable attempt to notify the landlord about the arrest in writing.
💡 General Comment
Law enforcement must notify landlords of drug seizures or arrests for weapons-related incidents at rental properties.
RCW 59.18.080

Payment of Rent Condition to Exercising Remedies—Exceptions

The tenant shall be current in the payment of rent including all utilities which the tenant has agreed in the rental agreement to pay before exercising any of the remedies accorded him or her under the provisions of this chapter: PROVIDED, That this section shall not be construed as limiting the tenant's civil remedies for negligent or intentional damages: PROVIDED FURTHER, That this section shall not be construed as limiting the tenant's right in an unlawful detainer proceeding to raise the defense that there is no rent due and owing.
💡 General Comment
Tenants must be current on rent before exercising statutory remedies, but this does not bar civil damage claims or defenses in eviction proceedings.
RCW 59.18.085

Rental of Condemned or Unlawful Dwelling—Tenant's Remedies—Relocation Assistance

If a governmental agency has notified the landlord that a dwelling is condemned or unlawful to occupy due to the existence of conditions that violate applicable codes, statutes, ordinances, or regulations, a landlord shall not enter into a rental agreement for the dwelling unit until the conditions are corrected. If a landlord knowingly violates this section, the tenant shall recover either three months' periodic rent or up to treble the actual damages sustained, whichever is greater, costs of suit, and reasonable attorneys' fees. Where a dwelling will be condemned, the landlord shall be required to pay relocation assistance of the greater of two thousand dollars per dwelling unit or three times the monthly rent, in addition to any deposit and prepaid rent, payable within seven days of the governmental agency's notice.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires landlords to pay relocation assistance of $2,000 per unit or 3x monthly rent (whichever is greater) when tenants are displaced by condemnation due to landlord failure.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits renting condemned units; requires relocation assistance to displaced tenants; landlords face treble damages for knowingly renting condemned units.
RCW 59.18.090

Landlord's Failure to Remedy Defective Condition—Tenant's Choice of Actions

If, after receipt of written notice, and expiration of the applicable period of time as provided in RCW 59.18.070, the landlord fails to remedy the defective condition within a reasonable time the tenant may: (1) Terminate the rental agreement and quit the premises upon written notice to the landlord without further obligation under the rental agreement, and shall be discharged from payment of rent for any period following the quitting date, and shall be entitled to a pro rata refund of any prepaid rent; (2) Bring an action in an appropriate court, or at arbitration if so agreed, for any remedy provided under this chapter or otherwise provided by law; or (3) Pursue other remedies available under this chapter.
💡 General Comment
After landlord fails to make repairs within the required time periods, the tenant may terminate the lease, sue for damages, or pursue arbitration.
RCW 59.18.100

Landlord's Failure to Carry Out Duties—Repairs Effected by Tenant—Deduction of Cost from Rent

If, at any time during the tenancy, the landlord fails to carry out any of the duties imposed by RCW 59.18.060 and notice is given to the landlord pursuant to RCW 59.18.070, the tenant may submit to the landlord a good faith estimate of the cost to perform the repairs. If the landlord fails to commence remedial action within the applicable time period after receipt of notice and the estimate, the tenant may contract with a licensed or registered person to make the repair. The tenant may deduct the cost of repair from the rent in an amount not to exceed the sum representing two months' rental of the tenant's unit per repair. The total costs of repairs deducted in any twelve-month period under this subsection shall not exceed two months' rent. For repairs by the tenant that cost not more than one month's rent, no estimate is necessary; total deductions under this method may not exceed one month's rent per twelve-month period.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's repair-and-deduct is capped at 2 months' rent per repair (licensed contractor) and 1 month's rent per repair (tenant self-performs). Annual cap is 2 months' rent or 1 month's rent respectively.
💡 General Comment
Allows tenants to repair defects and deduct costs from rent, capped at two months' rent for licensed contractor repairs within a 12-month period.
RCW 59.18.110

Failure to Carry Out Duties—Judgment for Diminished Rental Value and Repair Costs

If a court or an arbitrator determines that a landlord has failed to carry out a duty imposed by RCW 59.18.060 and a reasonable time has passed for the landlord to remedy the defective condition following notice, the court or arbitrator may determine the diminution in rental value of the premises due to the defective condition and shall render judgment against the landlord for the rent paid in excess of such diminished rental value from the time of notice of such defect to the time of decision and any costs of repair done pursuant to RCW 59.18.100 for which no deduction has been previously made. The tenant shall not be obligated to pay rent in excess of the diminished rental value of the premises until such defect or defects are corrected.
💡 General Comment
Courts or arbitrators may reduce rent to reflect diminished rental value during periods when landlord fails to maintain habitability.
RCW 59.18.115

Substandard and Dangerous Conditions—Rent Escrow Account

If a landlord fails to fulfill any substantial obligation imposed by RCW 59.18.060 that substantially endangers or impairs the health or safety of a tenant, and the tenant gives written notice of the conditions and the landlord fails to remedy within a reasonable time under RCW 59.18.070, the tenant may request that the local government inspect the premises. If the local government certifies that the conditions exist and substantially endanger the tenant's health or safety, the tenant shall deposit periodic rent into an escrow account rather than paying rent to the landlord. The landlord may apply to the court for release of escrowed funds after certifying that repairs have been made. The landlord shall not commence an unlawful detainer action for nonpayment of rent if the tenant deposits rent into escrow in accordance with this section.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's rent escrow remedy requires government certification of hazardous conditions before the tenant may withhold rent into escrow. Once in escrow, the landlord cannot evict for nonpayment.
💡 General Comment
Provides an escrow remedy for serious habitability failures: tenant deposits rent into court-supervised escrow rather than paying landlord until conditions are remedied.
RCW 59.18.120

Defective Condition—Unfeasible to Remedy—Termination of Tenancy

If a court or arbitrator determines a defective condition as described in RCW 59.18.060 to be so substantial that it is unfeasible for the landlord to remedy the defect within the time allotted by RCW 59.18.070, and that the tenant should not remain in the dwelling unit in its defective condition, the court or arbitrator may authorize the termination of the tenancy: PROVIDED, That the court or arbitrator shall set a reasonable time for the tenant to vacate the premises.
💡 General Comment
When a defect is so severe that repair is infeasible, a court or arbitrator may terminate the tenancy and set a reasonable move-out date.
RCW 59.18.125

Inspections by Local Municipalities—Frequency—Certificate of Inspection

Local municipalities may require that landlords provide a certificate of inspection as a business license condition. A local municipality may only require a certificate of inspection on a rental property once every three years. A rental property that has received a certificate of occupancy within the last four years and has had no code violations reported is exempt. If a rental property has twenty or fewer dwelling units, no more than four dwelling units may be selected for inspection as long as no health or safety conditions are found. If a rental property has twenty-one or more units, no more than twenty percent of units (up to 50) may be selected for inspection. Any person who knowingly submits a falsified certificate of inspection is guilty of a gross misdemeanor and subject to a fine of not more than five thousand dollars.
💡 General Comment
Regulates how often local governments can require rental property inspections — no more than once every three years; sets limits on number of units that must be inspected.
RCW 59.18.130

Duties of Tenant

Each tenant shall pay the rental amount at such times and in such amounts as provided for in the rental agreement or as otherwise provided by law and comply with all obligations imposed by applicable codes, statutes, ordinances, and regulations, and in addition shall: (1) Keep the premises as clean and sanitary as the conditions permit; (2) Properly dispose of rubbish, garbage, and other organic or flammable waste; (3) Properly use and operate all electrical, gas, heating, plumbing and other fixtures and appliances; (4) Not intentionally or negligently destroy, deface, damage, impair, or remove any part of the structure or dwelling; (5) Not permit a nuisance or common waste; (6) Not engage in drug-related activity at the rental premises; (7) Maintain the smoke detection device in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations; (8) Not engage in any activity at the rental premises that is imminently hazardous to the physical safety of other persons and entails physical assaults or unlawful use of a firearm or other deadly weapon which results in an arrest; (9) Not engage in any gang-related activity at the premises; and (10) Upon termination and vacation, restore the premises to their initial condition except for wear resulting from ordinary use.
💡 General Comment
Lists all tenant obligations including cleanliness, proper use of appliances, no drug or gang activity, smoke detector maintenance, and restoring unit at move-out.
RCW 59.18.140

Reasonable Obligations—Landlord's Duty to Provide Written Notice of Rent Increase

(1) The tenant shall conform to all reasonable obligations or restrictions concerning the use, occupation, and maintenance of his or her dwelling unit if such obligations are brought to the attention of the tenant at the time of his or her initial occupancy and thus become part of the rental agreement. (2) Except for termination of tenancy and an increase in the amount of rent, after 30 days' written notice to each affected tenant, a new rule of tenancy may become effective upon completion of the term of the rental agreement or sooner upon mutual consent. (3)(a) Except as provided in (b) and (c) of this subsection, a landlord shall provide a minimum of 90 days' prior written notice of an increase in the amount of rent to each affected tenant, and any increase in the amount of rent may not become effective prior to the completion of the term of the rental agreement. (b) If the rental agreement governs a subsidized tenancy where the amount of rent is based on the income of the tenant or circumstances specific to the subsidized household, a landlord shall provide a minimum of 30 days' prior written notice of an increase in the amount of rent.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires 90 days' advance written notice for rent increases (standard tenancies); 30 days for subsidized tenancies. This 90-day requirement was strengthened in 2019. A 2025 amendment added a 60-day transitional provision for leases entered before May 7, 2025 with less than 90 days remaining.
💡 General Comment
Requires 90 days' advance written notice before a rent increase takes effect; 30 days for subsidized tenancies. Any increase may not take effect before the end of the current lease term.
RCW 59.18.150

Landlord's Right of Entry—Conditions

The tenant shall not unreasonably withhold consent to the landlord to enter the dwelling unit to inspect the premises, make necessary or agreed repairs, alterations, or improvements, supply necessary services, or exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants, workers, or contractors. The landlord shall not abuse the right of access or use it to harass the tenant, and shall provide notice before entry as provided in this subsection. Except in the case of emergency or if it is impracticable to do so, the landlord shall give the tenant at least two days' written notice of his or her intent to enter and shall enter only at reasonable times. The notice must state the exact time and date or dates of entry. A landlord or tenant who continues to violate the rights of the other with respect to entry after being served with one written notification listing the date and time of the violation shall be liable for up to one hundred dollars for each violation after receipt of the notice.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires at least 2 days' (48 hours') written notice before landlord entry; notice must state exact date and time. The $100 per violation penalty applies only after one written warning has been given.
💡 General Comment
Requires minimum 48-hour advance written notice with exact date and time before landlord entry; emergency entry without notice is permitted; $100/violation penalty after written warning.
RCW 59.18.160

Landlord's Remedies If Tenant Fails to Remedy Defective Condition

If, after receipt of written notice as provided in RCW 59.18.170, the tenant fails to remedy the defective condition within a reasonable time, the landlord may: (1) Bring an action in an appropriate court, or at arbitration if so agreed for any remedy provided under this chapter or otherwise provided by law; or (2) Pursue other remedies available under this chapter.
💡 General Comment
After proper written notice to the tenant of a defect caused by the tenant, the landlord may pursue court action or other statutory remedies.
RCW 59.18.170

Landlord to Give Notice If Tenant Fails to Carry Out Duties—Late Fees

(1) If at any time during the tenancy the tenant fails to carry out the duties required by RCW 59.18.130 or 59.18.140, the landlord may give written notice to the tenant of said failure, which notice shall specify the nature of the failure. (2) The landlord may not charge a late fee for rent that is paid within five days following its due date. If rent is more than five days past due, the landlord may charge late fees commencing from the first day after the due date until paid. Nothing in this subsection prohibits a landlord from serving a notice to pay or vacate at any time after the rent becomes due. (3) A tenant whose primary source of income is regular, monthly governmental assistance received after the rent due date may request that the landlord change the rent due date to a date not more than five days after the standard due date.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's 5-day late fee grace period: landlords cannot charge late fees if rent is paid within 5 days. However, landlords may still serve the 14-day pay-or-vacate notice on day 1 of delinquency.
💡 General Comment
Establishes 5-day grace period before late fees may be charged; allows tenants on government assistance to adjust rent due date; landlord may serve pay/vacate notice immediately after rent is due.
RCW 59.18.180

Tenant's Failure to Comply with Statutory Duties—Landlord's Remedies

(1) If the tenant fails to comply with any portion of RCW 59.18.130 or 59.18.140, and such noncompliance can substantially affect the health and safety of the tenant or other tenants or substantially increase the hazards of fire or accident, and can be remedied by repair, replacement, or cleaning, the tenant shall comply within thirty days after written notice by the landlord, or in the case of emergency as promptly as conditions require. If the tenant fails to remedy within the period, the landlord may enter the dwelling unit, cause the work to be done, and submit an itemized bill. (2) Any other substantial noncompliance by the tenant of RCW 59.18.130 or 59.18.140 constitutes a ground for commencing an unlawful detainer action. (3) If drug-related activity is alleged, the compliance provisions do not apply and the landlord may proceed directly to unlawful detainer. (4) If criminal activity on the premises as described in RCW 59.18.130(8) leads to the tenant's arrest, the compliance provisions do not apply and the landlord may proceed directly to unlawful detainer.
📝 Washington Comment
For most tenant violations, Washington requires 30-day written notice and opportunity to cure before eviction. Drug-related and violent criminal activity are exceptions — landlords may proceed directly to unlawful detainer.
💡 General Comment
After written notice, tenants have 30 days to remedy non-emergency violations; no cure period for drug-related activity or violent criminal arrests.
RCW 59.18.190

Notice to Tenant to Remedy Nonconformance

Whenever the landlord learns of a breach of RCW 59.18.130 or has accepted performance by the tenant which is at variance with the terms of the rental agreement, he or she may immediately give notice to the tenant to remedy the nonconformance. Said notice shall expire after sixty days unless the landlord pursues any remedy under this chapter.
💡 General Comment
A landlord's notice to remedy nonconformance expires after 60 days if no legal action is taken; acceptance of variant performance does not waive the landlord's right to give notice.
RCW 59.18.200

Tenancy from Month to Month—End of Tenancy—Notice

(1)(a) When premises are rented for an indefinite time, with monthly or other periodic rent reserved, such tenancy shall be construed to be a tenancy from month to month, and shall end by written notice of 20 days or more, preceding the end of any of the months or periods of tenancy, given by the tenant to the landlord. (b) Any tenant who is a member of the armed forces may end a rental agreement with less than 20 days' written notice if the tenant receives permanent change of station or deployment orders that do not allow a 20-day written notice. (2)(c) Whenever a landlord plans to demolish or substantially rehabilitate premises or plans a change of use of premises, the landlord shall provide a written notice to a tenant at least 120 days before the tenancy ends.
📝 Washington Comment
In Washington, tenants on month-to-month tenancies terminate with 20 days' notice to the landlord (end of a monthly period). Landlords must give 120 days' notice for demolition, substantial rehab, or change of use. Military tenants may terminate with less than 20 days' notice if deployment orders require it.
💡 General Comment
Month-to-month tenants must give 20 days' notice to end tenancy; landlords need 120 days for demolition/rehab/change of use; military deployment exception exists.
RCW 59.18.210

Tenancies from Year to Year Except Under Written Contract

Tenancies from year to year are hereby abolished except when the same are created by express written contract. Leases may be in writing or print, or partly in writing and partly in print, and shall be legal and valid for any term or period not exceeding one year, without acknowledgment, witnesses or seals.
💡 General Comment
Year-to-year tenancies are abolished in Washington unless created by express written contract; leases up to one year do not require acknowledgment, witnesses, or seals.
RCW 59.18.220

End of Tenancy for a Specified Time—Armed Forces Exception

(1) Except as limited under RCW 59.18.650, in cases where premises are rented for a specified time, by express or implied contract, the tenancy shall be deemed expired at the end of such specified time upon notice consistent with RCW 59.18.650, served in a manner consistent with RCW 59.12.040. (2) Any tenant who is a member of the armed forces may end a tenancy for a specified time if the tenant receives permanent change of station or deployment orders, by providing written notice of 20 days or more to the landlord with a copy of the official military orders.
💡 General Comment
Fixed-term tenancies expire at end of stated term subject to just-cause protections under RCW 59.18.650; military members may terminate early with 20 days' notice and copy of orders.
RCW 59.18.230

Waiver of Chapter Provisions Prohibited—Provisions Prohibited from Rental Agreement

(1)(a) Except as provided in RCW 59.18.360, any provision of a lease whereby any section or subsection of this chapter is waived shall be deemed against public policy and shall be unenforceable. (1)(b) Any agreement entered into pursuant to an unlawful detainer action that requires the tenant to pay any amount in violation of RCW 59.18.283 or statutory judgment amount limits, or waives any rights of the tenant, is void and unenforceable. (2) No rental agreement may provide that the tenant: (a) Agrees to waive or forgo rights or remedies under this chapter; (b) Agrees to waive any right to bring, join, or participate in any cause of action against the landlord including class actions; (c) Signs a nondisclosure agreement relating to the lease agreement or details of the offer including rent amount, security deposits or fees, rent concessions, or lease specials; (d) Authorizes any person to confess judgment on a claim; (e) Agrees to pay the landlord's attorneys' fees except as authorized in this chapter; (f) Agrees to the exculpation or limitation of any liability of the landlord; (i) Agrees to pay late fees for rent paid within five days of the due date; or (j) Agrees to make rent payments through electronic means only.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington prohibits non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) about rent terms, security deposits, or lease specials, as well as mandatory electronic-only rent payment clauses. These were added in 2021-2025 amendments.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits rental agreement clauses waiving tenant rights, requiring attorney fee indemnification, NDAs about lease terms, early-payment late fees, or electronic-only payment; such provisions are void.
RCW 59.18.240

Reprisals or Retaliatory Actions by Landlord—Prohibited

So long as the tenant is in compliance with this chapter, the landlord shall not take or threaten to take reprisals or retaliatory action against the tenant because of any good faith and lawful complaints or reports by the tenant to a governmental authority concerning the failure of the landlord to substantially comply with any code, statute, ordinance, or regulation governing the maintenance or operation of the premises, if such condition may endanger or impair the health or safety of the tenant; or assertions or enforcement by the tenant of his or her rights and remedies under this chapter. "Reprisal or retaliatory action" includes: (a) Eviction of the tenant; (b) Increasing the rent required of the tenant; (c) Reduction of services to the tenant; and (d) Increasing the obligations of the tenant.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits landlord retaliation — including eviction, rent increases, service reductions, or obligation increases — against tenants for good-faith complaints to authorities or assertion of legal rights.
RCW 59.18.250

Reprisals or Retaliatory Actions by Landlord—Presumptions—Rebuttal—Costs

Initiation by the landlord of any action listed in RCW 59.18.240 within ninety days after a good faith and lawful act by the tenant as enumerated in RCW 59.18.240, or within ninety days after any inspection or proceeding of a governmental agency resulting from such act, shall create a rebuttable presumption that the action is a reprisal or retaliatory action against the tenant. In any action or eviction proceeding where the tenant prevails upon his or her claim or defense that the landlord has violated this section, the tenant shall be entitled to recover his or her costs of suit or arbitration, including a reasonable attorney's fee.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington creates a 90-day rebuttable presumption of retaliation. If a landlord takes adverse action within 90 days of a tenant's good-faith complaint or rights assertion, it is presumed retaliatory unless the landlord can rebut that presumption.
💡 General Comment
Creates 90-day rebuttable presumption of retaliation; tenant who prevails may recover attorneys' fees and costs.
RCW 59.18.253

Deposit to Secure Occupancy—Holding Deposits—Landlord's Duties

It shall be unlawful for a landlord to require a fee or deposit from a prospective tenant for the privilege of being placed on a waiting list to be considered as a tenant for a dwelling unit. A landlord who charges a fee or deposit to hold a dwelling unit must provide the prospective tenant with a receipt and a written statement of the conditions under which the fee or deposit may be retained, immediately upon payment. A landlord may not request a fee or deposit to hold a dwelling unit in excess of twenty-five percent of the first month's rent. If the prospective tenant does occupy the dwelling unit, the landlord must credit the amount of the fee or deposit to the tenant's first month's rent or security deposit. In any action brought for a violation of this section, a landlord may be liable for the amount of the fee or deposit charged, plus up to two times the fee or deposit.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington caps holding deposits at 25% of first month's rent and requires written conditions for retention. Waiting list fees are prohibited entirely.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits waitlist fees; caps holding deposits at 25% of first month's rent; requires written conditions for retention; doubles damages for violations.
RCW 59.18.255

Source of Income—Landlords Prohibited from Discrimination

A landlord may not, based on the source of income of an otherwise eligible prospective tenant or current tenant: (a) Refuse to lease or rent any real property; (b) Expel a prospective tenant or current tenant; (c) Make any distinction, discrimination, or restriction in the price, terms, conditions, fees, or privileges relating to the rental; (d) Represent to a person that a dwelling unit is not available when the dwelling unit is available; or (e) Otherwise make unavailable or deny a dwelling unit to a prospective tenant or current tenant. If a landlord requires that a prospective tenant have a certain threshold level of income, any source of income in the form of a rent voucher or subsidy must be subtracted from the total of the monthly rent prior to calculating if the income criteria have been met. A person in violation of this section shall be held liable in a civil action up to four and one-half times the monthly rent, as well as court costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. "Source of income" includes housing assistance, public assistance, emergency rental assistance, veterans benefits, social security, supplemental security income, and other programs administered by any federal, state, local, or nonprofit entity.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington prohibits source-of-income discrimination statewide, effective September 30, 2018. When calculating income requirements, landlords must subtract the voucher/subsidy amount from the rent before comparing to income thresholds. Damages are up to 4.5x monthly rent.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits landlords from discriminating based on tenant's source of income including housing vouchers, public assistance, or veterans benefits; civil penalties up to 4.5x monthly rent.
RCW 59.18.257

Screening of Prospective Tenants—Notice—Comprehensive Reusable Screening Report

Prior to obtaining any information about a prospective tenant, the prospective landlord shall first notify the prospective tenant in writing of: (i) what types of information will be accessed; (ii) what criteria may result in denial of the application; (iii) if a consumer report is used, the name and address of the consumer reporting agency and the prospective tenant's rights to a free copy of the report in the event of a denial; and (iv) whether or not the landlord will accept a comprehensive reusable tenant screening report made available by a consumer reporting agency. The landlord may charge a prospective tenant for costs incurred in obtaining a tenant screening report only if the required notice has been provided. If a prospective landlord takes an adverse action, the prospective landlord shall provide a written notice of the adverse action to the prospective tenant that states the reasons for the adverse action in a specified form.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires landlords to accept or state their policy on comprehensive reusable tenant screening reports (CRTSRs). If a landlord accepts a CRTSR, the landlord may not charge the tenant for their own screening report.
💡 General Comment
Requires landlords to provide pre-screening disclosures, state whether they accept comprehensive reusable screening reports, and provide written adverse action notices with reasons.
RCW 59.18.260

Security Deposit—Written Rental Agreement and Checklist Required

If any moneys are paid to the landlord by the tenant as a deposit or as security for performance of the tenant's obligations, the lease or rental agreement shall be in writing and shall include the terms and conditions under which the deposit or portion thereof may be withheld by the landlord upon termination of the lease or rental agreement. No deposit may be collected by a landlord unless the rental agreement is in writing and a written checklist or statement is provided by the landlord to the tenant at the commencement of the tenancy specifically describing the condition and cleanliness of or existing damages to the premises, fixtures, equipment, appliances, and furnishings. The checklist or statement shall be signed and dated by the landlord and the tenant, and the tenant shall be provided with a copy. If the landlord collects a deposit without providing a written checklist at the commencement of the tenancy, the landlord is liable to the tenant for the amount of the deposit.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires a signed written move-in checklist before any deposit may be collected. Failure to provide the checklist makes the landlord liable for the full deposit amount.
💡 General Comment
Security deposits require a written rental agreement plus a signed move-in condition checklist; landlords who collect without a checklist are liable for the full deposit.
RCW 59.18.270

Security Deposit—Deposit in Trust Account—Receipt Required

All moneys paid to the landlord by the tenant as a deposit as security for performance of the tenant's obligations shall promptly be deposited by the landlord in a trust account, maintained by the landlord for the purpose of holding such security deposits for tenants of the landlord, in a financial institution or licensed escrow agent located in Washington. The landlord shall provide the tenant with a written receipt for the deposit and shall provide written notice of the name and address and location of the depository and any subsequent change thereof. The tenant's claim to any moneys paid under this section shall be prior to that of any creditor of the landlord, including a trustee in bankruptcy or receiver, even if such moneys are commingled.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires security deposits to be held in a trust account at a Washington-licensed financial institution or escrow agent. The landlord must provide a written receipt AND written notice of the depository's name and address.
💡 General Comment
Security deposits must be held in a trust account at a Washington institution; landlord must provide written receipt and name/address of the depository; tenant's claim on deposit is prior to creditors.
RCW 59.18.280

Security Deposit—Statement and Notice of Basis for Retention—Remedies for Failure to Refund

(1)(a) Within 30 days after the termination of the rental agreement and vacation of the premises, or if the tenant abandons the premises within 30 days after the landlord learns of the abandonment, the landlord shall give a full and specific statement of the basis for retaining any of the deposit, together with documentation, and any refund due. (b) With the statement, the landlord shall include copies of estimates received or invoices paid to reasonably substantiate damage charges. Where repairs are performed by the landlord or the landlord's employee, the landlord shall include a statement of the time spent and the reasonable hourly rate charged. (c) No portion of any deposit may be withheld: (i) For wear resulting from ordinary use; (ii) for carpet cleaning unless the landlord documents wear beyond ordinary use; (iii) for costs of repair and replacement if the condition was not documented in the written move-in checklist; or (iv) in excess of the cost of repair of the damaged portion. (2) If the landlord fails to give the statement and documentation within 30 days, the landlord shall be liable to the tenant for the full amount of the deposit. The court may award up to two times the amount of the deposit for intentional refusal. (3)(c) For tenancies with rental agreements initiated on or after July 23, 2023, any lawsuit to recover sums exceeding the deposit shall be commenced within three years of the termination.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's 30-day security deposit return deadline: landlord must provide itemized statement with documentation (invoices/estimates) within 30 days. Cannot deduct for ordinary wear, undocumented damage, or carpet cleaning without proof of excessive wear. Intentional refusal to return may result in 2x damages.
💡 General Comment
Requires security deposit return with itemized statement and documentation within 30 days; prohibits deductions for ordinary wear, undocumented damage, or routine carpet cleaning; 2x damages for intentional non-return.
RCW 59.18.283

Moneys Paid by Tenant—Landlord Must Apply Toward Rent—Installment Payment Plans

(1) A landlord must first apply any payment made by a tenant toward rent before applying any payment toward late payments, damages, legal costs, or other fees, including attorneys' fees. (2) Except as provided in RCW 59.18.410, the tenant's right to possession of the premises may not be conditioned on a tenant's payment or satisfaction of any monetary amount other than rent. However, this does not foreclose a landlord from pursuing other lawful remedies to collect late payments, legal costs, or other fees. (3) When, at the commencement of the tenancy, the landlord has provided an installment payment plan for nonrefundable fees or deposits for the security of the tenant's obligations and the tenant defaults in payment, the landlord may treat the default in payment as rent owing.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington law requires rent payments to be applied to rent first, before any other fees. Landlords cannot condition possession on payment of anything other than rent — fees and damages must be pursued separately.
💡 General Comment
Requires landlord to apply all tenant payments to rent first before fees; prohibits conditioning possession on payment of non-rent amounts; allows installment plans for deposits and fees.
RCW 59.18.285

Nonrefundable Fees—Not to be Designated as Deposit—Written Agreement Required

No moneys paid to the landlord which are nonrefundable may be designated as a deposit or as part of any deposit. If any moneys are paid to the landlord as a nonrefundable fee, the rental agreement shall be in writing and shall clearly specify that the fee is nonrefundable. If the landlord fails to provide a written rental agreement, the landlord is liable to the tenant for the amount of any fees collected as nonrefundable fees. If the written rental agreement fails to specify that the fee is nonrefundable, the fee must be treated as a refundable deposit under RCW 59.18.260, 59.18.270, and 59.18.280.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires nonrefundable fees to be clearly labeled as such in a written rental agreement. Any fee not so labeled must be treated as a refundable security deposit.
💡 General Comment
Nonrefundable fees must be identified in writing; fees not designated as nonrefundable in a written agreement are treated as refundable deposits.
RCW 59.18.290

Removal or Exclusion of Tenant—Illegal Lockouts—Attorneys' Fees

(1) It is unlawful for the landlord to remove or exclude from the premises the tenant thereof except under a court order so authorizing. Any tenant so removed or excluded in violation of this section may recover possession of the property or terminate the rental agreement and, in either case, may recover the actual damages sustained. The prevailing party may recover the costs of suit or arbitration and reasonable attorneys' fees. (2) It is unlawful for the tenant to hold over in the premises or exclude the landlord therefrom after the termination of the rental agreement except under a valid court order. (3) Where the court has entered a judgment in favor of the landlord restoring possession of the property, the court shall not award attorneys' fees if the judgment for possession is entered after the tenant failed to respond to a pleading or if the total rent awarded is equal to or less than two months of the tenant's monthly contract rent or $1,200, whichever is greater.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington strictly prohibits self-help evictions (lockouts, utility shutoffs, property removal). Court order required before any physical removal. Landlords may not recover attorneys' fees in small rent-amount cases.
💡 General Comment
Self-help evictions are unlawful — a court order is required to remove a tenant; tenant may recover damages and fees if illegally locked out; caps on landlord attorney fee awards in small cases.
RCW 59.18.300

Termination of Tenant's Utility Services—Prohibition

It shall be unlawful for a landlord to intentionally cause termination of any of his or her tenant's utility services, including water, heat, electricity, or gas, except for an interruption of utility services for a reasonable time in order to make necessary repairs. Any landlord who violates this section may be liable to such tenant for his or her actual damages sustained, and up to one hundred dollars for each day or part thereof the tenant is thereby deprived of any utility service, and the prevailing party may recover his or her costs of suit or arbitration and a reasonable attorney's fee.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's utility lockout penalty: $100 per day per utility service unlawfully terminated, plus actual damages and attorneys' fees.
💡 General Comment
Prohibits landlord from intentionally cutting off tenant utilities; $100 per day penalty per service plus actual damages and attorney fees.
RCW 59.18.310

Default in Rent—Abandonment—Liability of Tenant—Landlord's Remedies

(1) If the tenant defaults in the payment of rent and reasonably indicates by words or actions the intention not to resume tenancy, the tenant shall be liable for abandonment: the landlord shall make a reasonable effort to mitigate the damages. (a) When the tenancy is month-to-month, the tenant shall be liable for the rent for the thirty days following the date the landlord learns of the abandonment, or the date the next regular rental payment would have become due, whichever first occurs. (b) When the tenancy is for a term greater than month-to-month, the tenant shall be liable for the lesser of: (i) the entire rent due for the remainder of the term; or (ii) all rent accrued during the period reasonably necessary to rerent the premises at a fair rental, plus the difference between such fair rental and the rent agreed to in the prior agreement, plus actual costs incurred by the landlord in rerenting. (2) The landlord may enter and take possession of tenant's property found on the premises, store it in a reasonably secure place, and make reasonable efforts to notify the tenant. After forty-five days from the date the sale/disposal notice is mailed or delivered, the landlord may sell or dispose of such property.
📝 Washington Comment
When a tenant abandons, the landlord must mitigate damages. Month-to-month tenants are liable for 30 days after abandonment; fixed-term tenants are liable for the lesser of remaining rent or the rerenting period's losses.
💡 General Comment
Establishes landlord's mitigation duty and tenant's liability formula upon abandonment; allows landlord to store and eventually sell abandoned personal property after 45 days' notice.
RCW 59.18.312

Writ of Restitution—Storage and Sale of Tenant's Property

A landlord shall, upon the execution of a writ of restitution by the sheriff, enter and take possession of any property of the tenant found on the premises. The landlord may store the property in any reasonably secure place, including the premises, and sell or dispose of the property as provided under this section. The landlord must store the property if the tenant serves a written request to do so on the landlord no later than three days after service of the writ. Property stored under this section shall be returned to the tenant after the tenant has paid the actual or reasonable drayage and storage costs, whichever is less. Prior to the sale of property with a cumulative value over $250, the landlord shall notify the tenant of the pending sale. After 30 days from the date of the sale notice, the landlord may sell the property.
📝 Washington Comment
Tenants who receive a writ of restitution have 3 days to request that the landlord store their property rather than place it on public property. Property valued over $250 requires 30-day notice before sale.
💡 General Comment
Establishes procedures for handling tenant property after eviction including storage request rights, notice requirements before sale, and use of sale proceeds.
RCW 59.18.315

Mediation of Disputes by Independent Third Party

The landlord and tenant may agree in writing to submit any dispute arising under the provisions of this chapter or under the terms, conditions, or performance of the rental agreement, to mediation by an independent third party. The parties may agree to submit any dispute to mediation before exercising their right to arbitration under RCW 59.18.320.
💡 General Comment
Landlords and tenants may voluntarily agree to mediate disputes before proceeding to arbitration or court.
RCW 59.18.320

Arbitration—Authorized—Exceptions—Notice—Procedure

The landlord and tenant may agree, in writing, to submit to arbitration any controversy arising under this chapter, except controversies regarding the existence of defects covered in RCW 59.18.070(1) and (2) before the implementation of any remedy by the tenant, and situations where court action has been started by either landlord or tenant. Arbitration shall be administered by any arbitrator agreed upon by the parties and shall comply with chapter 7.04A RCW. The party initiating arbitration shall give reasonable notice to the other party.
💡 General Comment
Arbitration of disputes is allowed by agreement in writing, with exceptions for certain defect controversies and when court action is pending.
RCW 59.18.352

Threatening Behavior by Tenant—Termination of Agreement

If a tenant notifies the landlord that he or she or another tenant who shares that dwelling unit has been threatened by another tenant, and: (1) the threat was made with a firearm or other deadly weapon; and (2) the tenant who made the threat is arrested; and (3) the landlord fails to file an unlawful detainer action against the threatening tenant within seven calendar days after receiving notice of the arrest from a law enforcement agency; then the threatened tenant may terminate the rental agreement and quit the premises upon written notice to the landlord without further obligation under the rental agreement. The terminating tenant is discharged from payment of rent for any period following the quitting date, and is entitled to a pro rata refund of prepaid rent and a full accounting of any deposit.
📝 Washington Comment
If a landlord does not file an eviction against a threatening tenant within 7 days of notice of arrest, the threatened tenant may terminate without penalty.
💡 General Comment
Allows a threatened tenant to terminate the lease if the landlord fails to file for eviction within 7 days of the threatening tenant's arrest.
RCW 59.18.354

Threatening Behavior by Landlord—Termination of Agreement

If a tenant is threatened by the landlord with a firearm or other deadly weapon as defined in RCW 9A.04.110, and the threat leads to an arrest of the landlord, then the tenant may terminate the rental agreement and quit the premises without further obligation under the rental agreement. The tenant is discharged from payment of rent for any period following the quitting date, and is entitled to a pro rata refund of any prepaid rent, and shall receive a full and specific statement of the basis for retaining any of the deposit together with any refund due in accordance with RCW 59.18.280.
💡 General Comment
If a landlord threatens a tenant with a deadly weapon and is arrested, the tenant may immediately terminate the lease without penalty.
RCW 59.18.360

Exemptions from Certain Provisions by Written Agreement

A landlord and tenant may agree, in writing, to exempt themselves from the provisions of RCW 59.18.060, 59.18.100, 59.18.110, 59.18.120, 59.18.130, and 59.18.190 if: (1) the agreement does not appear in a standard form lease; (2) there is no substantial inequality in the bargaining position of the two parties; (3) the exemption does not violate the public policy of this state in favor of ensuring safe and sanitary housing; and (4) either the local county prosecutor's office or the consumer protection division of the attorney general's office or the attorney for the tenant has approved the application for exemption in writing.
📝 Washington Comment
Waivers of habitability duties are only valid when separately negotiated (not in standard forms), with relatively equal bargaining power, and with government or attorney approval — very rare in practice.
💡 General Comment
Allows landlord and tenant to waive certain habitability/duty provisions by separate written agreement only when bargaining is equal and with government or attorney approval — limited exception.
RCW 59.18.365

Unlawful Detainer Action—Summons—Form

The summons must contain the names of the parties to the proceeding, the attorney or attorneys if any, the court in which the same is brought, the nature of the action, in concise terms, and the relief sought, and also the return day. The summons must contain a street address for service of the notice of appearance or answer. The summons for unlawful detainer actions covered by this chapter shall be substantially in the statutory form, which includes the header: "THIS IS AN IMPORTANT LEGAL DOCUMENT TO EVICT YOU." and prominently states the tenant's right to legal representation and the Eviction Defense Screening Line number (855-657-8387).
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's statutory eviction summons form must include prominent notice of the tenant's right to a lawyer and the Eviction Defense Screening Line. Using a non-conforming summons is grounds for dismissal.
💡 General Comment
Mandates the specific statutory form for eviction summons, including conspicuous notice of tenant's right to legal representation and the eviction defense hotline.
RCW 59.18.367

Unlawful Detainer Action—Limited Dissemination Authorized

A court may order an unlawful detainer action to be of limited dissemination for one or more persons if: (a) the court finds that the plaintiff's case was sufficiently without basis in fact or law; (b) the tenancy was reinstated under RCW 59.18.410 or other law; or (c) other good cause exists for limiting dissemination. When an order for limited dissemination has been entered, a tenant screening service provider must not disclose the existence of that unlawful detainer action in a tenant screening report, or use the unlawful detainer action as a factor in determining any score or recommendation.
💡 General Comment
Courts may seal or limit dissemination of eviction case records where the case lacked merit, the tenancy was reinstated, or for other good cause — protecting tenants from unjust eviction history disclosures.
RCW 59.18.368

Unlawful Detainer Action—Residential Tenancies—Housing Court Commissioners

In each county the superior court may appoint one or more attorneys to act as housing court commissioners to assist the superior court in disposing of unlawful detainer actions for residential tenancies, with the prior consent of the county legislative authority. Housing court commissioners shall receive training from the administrative office of the courts on the residential landlord-tenant act, the manufactured/mobile home landlord-tenant act, show cause hearing processes, and unlawful detainer procedures. Appointments may be full-time or part-time. Housing court commissioners must comply with the fairness and impartiality standards established in RCW 3.34.110.
📝 Washington Comment
2025 legislation added housing court commissioners to address the record eviction filing rates Washington was experiencing as of November 2024 (23,000 filings).
💡 General Comment
Authorizes superior courts to appoint housing court commissioners to handle eviction cases, with mandatory training requirements; added in 2025 to address record eviction filing volumes.
RCW 59.18.370

Forcible Entry or Detainer or Unlawful Detainer Actions—Writ of Restitution—Application—Show Cause Hearing

The plaintiff, at the time of commencing an action of forcible entry or detainer or unlawful detainer, or at any time afterwards, upon filing the complaint, may apply to the superior court in which the action is pending for an order directing the defendant to appear and show cause, if any he or she has, why a writ of restitution should not issue restoring to the plaintiff possession of the property in the complaint described, and the judge shall by order fix a time and place for a hearing of the motion, which shall not be less than seven nor more than thirty days from the date of service of the order upon defendant.
💡 General Comment
The show cause hearing for a writ of restitution must be scheduled no fewer than 7 and no more than 30 days from service of the order on the defendant.
RCW 59.18.410

Unlawful Detainer Actions—Judgment—Execution—Reinstatement of Tenancy

(1) If the verdict or finding is in favor of the landlord, judgment shall be entered for the restitution of the premises. Late fees in any judgment are capped at $75 total. (2) When the tenant is liable for unlawful detainer after a default in the payment of rent, execution upon the judgment shall not occur until the expiration of five court days after the entry of the judgment. Before entry of a judgment or until five court days after entry, the tenant or any subtenant or interested party may pay into court or to the landlord the amount of the rent due, any court costs, late fees (capped at $75 total), and attorneys' fees if awarded — in which event any judgment entered shall be satisfied and the tenant restored to his or her tenancy. The landlord shall accept any pledge of emergency rental assistance funds provided by a governmental or nonprofit entity. (3)(a) Following entry of a judgment for restitution due to nonpayment of rent, the court may stay the writ of restitution upon good cause for up to 90 days, requiring the tenant to pay one month's rent within five court days of the order.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington caps late fees in judgment at $75 total. Tenants have 5 court days after judgment entry to pay and reinstate the tenancy. Emergency rental assistance pledges must be accepted by the landlord. The court may stay a writ for up to 90 days on a payment plan.
💡 General Comment
Judgment in landlord's favor results in possession order; tenants have 5 court days after judgment to pay all amounts and reinstate; late fees capped at $75; landlords must accept emergency rental assistance pledges.
RCW 59.18.412

Forcible or Unlawful Detainer Proceeding—Remote Hearings

(1) Hearings may be conducted in person or remotely in order to enhance access for all parties. At the court's discretion, parties, witnesses, and others may attend a hearing in person or remotely, including by telephone, video, or other electronic means where possible. The court shall grant any request for a remote appearance unless the court finds good cause to require in-person attendance. Courts may not charge fees for remote appearances. (2) Any party must be permitted to make an emergency application by phone or videoconference and file such documents by email, fax, or other means that can be performed remotely.
💡 General Comment
Remote hearings are available in eviction proceedings; courts must grant remote appearance requests absent good cause; no fees for remote appearances.
RCW 59.18.430

Applicability to Prior, Existing or Future Leases

RCW 59.18.010 through 59.18.360 and 59.18.900 shall not apply to any lease entered into prior to July 16, 1973. All provisions of this chapter shall apply to any lease or periodic tenancy entered into on or subsequent to July 16, 1973.
💡 General Comment
The Residential Landlord-Tenant Act applies to all leases entered into on or after July 16, 1973.
RCW 59.18.440

Relocation Assistance for Low-Income Tenants—Local Government Authority

Any city, town, county, or municipal corporation required to develop a comprehensive plan under RCW 36.70A.040(1) is authorized to require property owners to provide their portion of reasonable relocation assistance to low-income tenants upon the demolition, substantial rehabilitation, or change of use of residential property. "Low-income tenants" means tenants whose combined total income per dwelling unit is at or below fifty percent of the median income, adjusted for family size, in the county where the tenants reside. Relocation assistance provided to low-income tenants under this section shall not exceed two thousand dollars for each dwelling unit displaced. The property owner's portion shall not exceed one-half of the required relocation assistance in cash or services.
💡 General Comment
Authorizes local governments to require landlords to pay up to $2,000/unit in relocation assistance to low-income tenants displaced by demolition, rehab, or change of use.
RCW 59.18.500

Gang-Related Activity—Legislative Findings

The legislature finds and declares that the ability to feel safe and secure in one's own home and in one's own community is of primary importance. The legislature recognizes that certain gang-related activity can affect the safety of a considerable number of people in the rental premises and dwelling units. The remedy provided in RCW 59.18.510 is intended to be used solely to protect the health and safety of the community, not as a means for private citizens to bring malicious or unfounded actions.
💡 General Comment
Legislative declaration of intent for Washington's gang-related activity eviction provisions — emphasizes protection of the community, not harassment of tenants.
RCW 59.18.510

Gang-Related Activity—Notice and Demand—Petition to Court

Any person whose life, safety, health, or use of property is being injured or endangered by a tenant's gang-related activity, who has legal standing and resides, works in, or owns property in the same multifamily building, apartment complex, or within a one-block radius may serve the landlord with a ten-day notice and demand that the landlord commence an unlawful detainer action against the tenant. Within ten days of receiving the notice, the landlord has a duty to take reasonable steps to investigate the tenant's alleged noncompliance. The person who served the notice and demand may petition the court to have the tenancy terminated if the landlord fails to conduct a reasonable investigation, or if after investigation the tenant continues to engage in prohibited activity. The court shall not issue the order terminating the tenancy unless the allegations of gang-related activity are corroborated by a source other than the person who petitioned the court.
💡 General Comment
Neighbors may demand landlords evict tenants for gang-related activity; if the landlord fails to investigate within 10 days, neighbors may petition court directly; corroboration from a second source required.
RCW 59.18.550

Drug and Alcohol Free Housing—Program of Recovery

"Drug and alcohol free housing" requires a rental agreement and means a dwelling in which: (a) each dwelling unit is occupied by at least one tenant who is a recovering alcoholic or drug addict participating in a program of recovery; (b) the landlord is a nonprofit corporation or housing authority; (c) the landlord provides a drug and alcohol free environment, a compliance monitor, individual and group support for recovery, and access to a specified program of recovery; and (d) the rental agreement includes provisions requiring tenant sobriety and participation in a recovery program. If a tenant living for less than two years in drug and alcohol free housing uses substances in violation of the agreement, the landlord may deliver a three-day notice terminating the tenancy with one day to comply.
💡 General Comment
Establishes a special housing category for recovery-focused housing operated by nonprofits, allowing expedited eviction (3-day notice with 1-day cure) for substance use violations.
RCW 59.18.570

Victim Protection—Definitions

The definitions in this section apply throughout RCW 59.18.575 through 59.18.585: (2) "Domestic violence" has the same meaning as set forth in RCW 7.105.010. (5) "Qualified third party" means law enforcement officers, persons subject to chapter 18.120 RCW, employees of a court of the state, licensed mental health professionals or other licensed counselors, employees of crime victim/witness programs who are trained advocates, and members of the clergy. (6) "Sexual assault" has the same meaning as set forth in RCW 70.125.030. (7) "Stalking" has the same meaning as set forth in RCW 9A.46.110. (9) "Unlawful harassment" has the same meaning as in RCW 7.105.010 and also includes any request for sexual favors to a tenant or household member in return for a change in or performance of any or all terms of a lease or rental agreement.
💡 General Comment
Defines key terms for Washington's victim protection statutes: domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, unlawful harassment, qualified third parties, and household members.
RCW 59.18.575

Victim Protection—Notice to Landlord—Termination of Rental Agreement—Procedures

(1)(a) If a tenant notifies the landlord in writing that he or she or a household member was a victim of an act that constitutes a crime of domestic violence, sexual assault, unlawful harassment, or stalking, and the tenant or household member has a protection order or a written record of a report signed by a qualified third party, then the tenant may terminate the rental agreement and quit the premises without further obligation under the rental agreement. The request to terminate must occur within ninety days of the reported act. A tenant who terminates a rental agreement under this section is discharged from the payment of rent for any period following the last day of the month of the quitting date. Notwithstanding lease provisions that allow forfeiture of a deposit for early termination, a tenant who terminates under this section is entitled to the return of the full deposit. (3) If the tenant or household member is a victim of sexual assault, stalking, or unlawful harassment by a landlord, the tenant may change or add locks to the dwelling unit at the tenant's expense.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington allows domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, or unlawful harassment victims to terminate a lease with no penalty within 90 days of the incident, upon providing a protection order or qualified third-party report. Full security deposit must be returned.
💡 General Comment
Domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, and harassment victims may terminate a lease penalty-free within 90 days of the incident; full deposit returned; tenant may change locks when landlord is the perpetrator.
RCW 59.18.580

Victim Protection—Limitation on Tenant Screening Service Provider Disclosures

(1) A tenant screening service provider may not: (a) disclose a tenant's, applicant's, or household member's status as a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking; or (b) knowingly disclose that a tenant, applicant, or household member has previously terminated a rental agreement under RCW 59.18.575. (2) A landlord may not terminate a tenancy, fail to renew a tenancy, or refuse to enter into a rental agreement based on the tenant's or applicant's or a household member's status as a victim, or based on the tenant or applicant having terminated a rental agreement under RCW 59.18.575. (4) It is a defense to an unlawful detainer action that the action is in violation of subsection (2) of this section.
💡 General Comment
Tenant screening services may not disclose victim status; landlords may not evict or discriminate based on victim status or prior lease termination under victim protection statutes.
RCW 59.18.585

Victim Protection—Possession of Dwelling Unit—Exclusion of Others—New Lock or Key

A tenant who has obtained a court order from a court of competent jurisdiction granting him or her possession of a dwelling unit to the exclusion of one or more cotenants may request that a lock be replaced or configured for a new key at the tenant's expense. The landlord shall, if provided a copy of the order, comply with the request and shall not provide copies of the new keys to the tenant restrained or excluded by the court's order. This section does not release a cotenant, other than a household member who is the victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking, from liability or obligations under the rental agreement.
💡 General Comment
Upon a court order excluding a cotenant, the landlord must change locks and withhold new keys from the excluded cotenant; excluded cotenants remain liable on the lease unless they are themselves victims.
RCW 59.18.590

Death of a Tenant—Designated Person

(1)(a) At a landlord's request, the tenant may designate a person to act for the tenant on the tenant's death when the tenant is the sole occupant of the dwelling unit. Any designation must be in writing, be separate from the rental agreement, and include the designated person's name, mailing address, electronic communications address, and telephone number; a signed statement authorizing the landlord to allow the designated person to access the dwelling unit, remove the tenant's property, receive refunds due to the tenant, and dispose of the tenant's property consistent with the tenant's last will and testament; and a conspicuous statement that the designation remains in effect until revoked in writing. (3) The tenant may change the designated person or revoke any previous designation in writing at any time prior to his or her death.
💡 General Comment
Tenants may designate a person (in a separate written document) to handle property and receive refunds upon the tenant's death; designation is revocable until death.
RCW 59.18.595

Death of a Tenant—Landlord Duties—Disposition of Property Procedures

(1) In the event of the death of a tenant who is the sole occupant of the dwelling unit: (a) The landlord, upon learning of the death, shall promptly mail or personally deliver written notice to any known personal representative, known designated person, emergency contact, or known successor of the tenant. The notice must state the tenancy will terminate 15 days from the date notice is mailed or the date through which rent is paid, whichever comes later, unless during that time period a tenant representative makes arrangements to pay rent in advance for no more than 60 days to allow orderly removal of property. (2) A landlord shall send a second written notice before selling or disposing of a deceased tenant's property. If no tenant representative contacts the landlord within 45 days after the second notice, the landlord may sell or dispose of property with a fair market value over $1,000 in a commercially reasonable manner. (7) A landlord who complies with this section is relieved from any liability relating to the deceased tenant's property.
💡 General Comment
Upon a tenant's death, landlord must give notice and allow 15 days for family/representatives to arrange removal; second notice required before any property disposal; 45-day wait before sale; landlords follow procedures are relieved of liability.
RCW 59.18.610

Installments—Deposits, Nonrefundable Fees, and Last Month's Rent

(1)(a) Except as provided in (b) of this subsection, upon receipt of a tenant's written request, a landlord must permit the tenant to pay any deposits, nonrefundable fees, and last month's rent in installments. (b) A landlord is not required to permit installment payments if the total amount of deposits and nonrefundable fees does not exceed twenty-five percent of the first full month's rent and payment of last month's rent is not required at the inception of the tenancy. (2) In all cases where premises are rented for a specified time of three months or longer, the tenant may elect to pay in three consecutive and equal monthly installments, beginning at the inception of the tenancy. In all other cases, the tenant may elect to pay in two consecutive and equal monthly installments. (3) A landlord may not impose any fee, charge any interest, or otherwise impose a cost on a tenant because a tenant elects to pay in installments. (5) Any landlord who refuses to permit a tenant to pay in installments is subject to a statutory penalty of one month's rent and reasonable attorneys' fees payable to the tenant.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington requires landlords to allow deposit/fee installment payment plans upon tenant written request (unless total is under 25% of first month's rent and no last month's rent is required). Refusing installments triggers a 1-month rent statutory penalty.
💡 General Comment
Landlords must allow deposits and nonrefundable fees to be paid in 2-3 installments upon tenant written request; no fees or interest may be charged for installment payment; 1-month rent penalty for refusal.
RCW 59.18.640

Indigent Tenants—Right to Counsel in Eviction Proceedings

Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the court must appoint an attorney for an indigent tenant in an unlawful detainer proceeding under this chapter and chapters 59.12 and 59.20 RCW. The office of civil legal aid is responsible for implementation. In implementing this section, the office of civil legal aid shall assign priority to providing legal representation to indigent tenants in those counties in which the most evictions occur and to indigent tenants who are disproportionately at risk of eviction. For purposes of this section, "indigent" means any person receiving public assistance or receiving an annual income, after taxes, of 200 percent or less of the current federally established poverty level.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington established a right to counsel for indigent tenants in eviction proceedings. Priority is given to counties with the highest eviction rates. Income threshold is 200% of the federal poverty level.
💡 General Comment
Indigent tenants (at or below 200% of federal poverty level) are entitled to a court-appointed attorney in eviction proceedings, subject to appropriated funding.
RCW 59.18.650

Eviction of Tenant—Just Cause Required—Notice—Penalties

(1)(a) A landlord may not evict a tenant, refuse to continue a tenancy, or end a periodic tenancy except for the causes enumerated in subsection (2) of this section and as otherwise provided in this subsection. (1)(b) If a landlord and tenant enter into a rental agreement providing for tenancy to continue indefinitely on a month-to-month or periodic basis after the agreement expires, the landlord may not end the tenancy except for cause; however, a landlord may end such a tenancy at the end of the initial period only if the initial lease was between 6 and 12 months and the landlord provides at least 60 days' advance written notice before the end of the initial period. (2) Causes for eviction include: (a) Nonpayment of rent after 14-day notice; (b) Substantial breach of a material term or obligation after 10-day written notice to cure; (c) Waste, nuisance, or unlawful activity after 3-day notice to quit; (d) Owner or immediate family member move-in with 90 days' notice; (e) Landlord elects to sell a single-family residence with 90 days' notice; (f) Demolition, substantial rehabilitation, or change of use with 120 days' notice; (g) Conversion to condominiums with 120 days' notice; and additional causes including tenant refusal to agree to a new rental agreement.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's just-cause eviction statute (RCW 59.18.650) requires documented cause for most residential evictions. Owner move-in and sale-of-single-family-residence require 90 days' notice; demolition/rehab/conversion require 120 days. Month-to-month tenancies after a lease expire are protected by just-cause requirements.
💡 General Comment
Comprehensive just-cause eviction protection for Washington tenants — landlords must have specific documented cause from the statutory list; different causes require different advance notice periods (3 to 120 days).
RCW 59.18.670

Security Deposit—Landlord Waiver, Disclosure Form—Fee in Lieu

A landlord may offer a tenant the option to pay a monthly fee in lieu of a security deposit, under a written agreement. The landlord must offer the security deposit option as an alternative to any fee in lieu option. The landlord must provide the tenant with a written disclosure of the differences between a security deposit and a fee in lieu, using a model form developed by the department of commerce. A landlord may not require a fee in lieu of a security deposit without offering the tenant the option of a security deposit instead. Any fees collected in lieu of a security deposit are nonrefundable and may not be reported as a debt or included in a tenant screening report.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington now allows fee-in-lieu-of-deposit programs but the landlord must always offer a security deposit as an alternative. Fee-in-lieu amounts are nonrefundable and cannot be reported as a debt.
💡 General Comment
Landlords may offer monthly fees in lieu of security deposits but must also offer the traditional deposit option; written disclosures required; fee-in-lieu amounts are nonrefundable and not reportable as debt.
RCW 59.18.700

Landlord—Prohibition on Certain Rent Increases—Notice—Enforcement—Penalties

A landlord may not increase rent by more than the lesser of seven percent plus the consumer price index, or ten percent, above the existing rent, in any twelve-month period for a tenancy in effect for twelve months or more. A landlord must provide written notice of any rent increase at least ninety days before the increase takes effect. A landlord who violates this section may be liable to the tenant for the amount of any rent charged in excess of the limit, plus up to three months of the tenant's monthly rent, and court costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. A tenant may assert a violation of this section as an affirmative defense in an unlawful detainer action.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington enacted a rent increase cap (effective 2025): annual rent increases are capped at the lesser of CPI+7% or 10% for tenancies of 12+ months. This is one of the most significant landlord-tenant law changes in Washington in decades.
💡 General Comment
Rent increases capped at lesser of CPI+7% or 10% per twelve-month period for tenancies 12+ months old; 90-day advance notice required; violations expose landlord to up to 3 months' rent in damages.
RCW 59.18.710

Landlord—Prohibition on Certain Rent Increases—Exemptions

The provisions of RCW 59.18.700 do not apply to: (1) A dwelling unit that received a certificate of occupancy within the previous ten years; (2) A single-family residence that is not part of a larger rental complex; (3) A subsidized housing unit where the rent is based on income; (4) Dwelling units that are the subject of a government-assisted affordable housing program with recorded use restrictions; or (5) A rental agreement for a tenancy in effect for fewer than twelve months.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's rent cap exempts new construction (under 10 years old), single-family homes, income-based subsidized housing, recorded affordable housing programs, and tenancies under 12 months.
💡 General Comment
Lists exemptions from Washington's rent increase cap: new construction (10 years), single-family homes, subsidized housing, income-based housing, and tenancies under 12 months.
RCW 59.18.720

Landlord—Notice of Rent Increases—Form

A landlord shall provide written notice of an increase in the amount of rent to each affected tenant at least ninety days before the effective date of the increase. The notice must be in writing and must include: (1) The amount of the increase; (2) The amount of the new rent; (3) The effective date of the increase; and (4) A statement that the tenant has the right to dispute the increase if it exceeds the cap established in RCW 59.18.700, and information about how to contest the increase.
📝 Washington Comment
Washington's rent increase notice must include a statement of the tenant's right to dispute an increase that exceeds the RCW 59.18.700 cap.
💡 General Comment
Written rent increase notices must include amount, new rent amount, effective date, and notice of tenant's right to contest if the increase exceeds the statutory cap.
RCW 59.18.730

Online Landlord Resource Center

The department of commerce shall develop and maintain an online landlord resource center that provides information about the rights and responsibilities of landlords and tenants under this chapter, including information about the rent increase limitations in RCW 59.18.700, how to calculate allowable rent increases, the notice requirements for rent increases, and information about how tenants may contest rent increases that exceed the applicable limitations.
💡 General Comment
Requires the Department of Commerce to maintain an online resource center explaining landlord-tenant rights including rent cap calculations and tenant contest procedures.
RCW 59.18.900

Severability—1973 1st ex.s. c 207

If any provision of this chapter or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the chapter or the application of the provisions to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected.
💡 General Comment
Standard severability clause — invalidation of any individual provision does not affect the rest of the chapter.
RCW 59.18.912

Construction—Chapter Applicable to State Registered Domestic Partnerships

The provisions of this chapter shall be construed to apply to state registered domestic partnerships as defined in RCW 26.60.020 in the same manner as they apply to married spouses.
💡 General Comment
Domestic partnerships registered under Washington state law are afforded the same rights as married spouses under the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act.

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