The relationship between landlords and tenants is regulated at the state level, through lease and rental agreement laws. Typically, these laws place limits on how much of a security deposit a landlord may require and which types of discrimination are prohibited. Nevada lease and rental agreement laws require security deposits to be returned within 30 days of termination of the lease.
See the following summary chart and elaboration below it to learn more about Nevada's lease and rental agreement laws. See FindLaw's Rental and Lease Agreements section for additional articles and resources.
Code Section | 118A.470; 207.300; 118A.242 |
Terms of Leases | Holdover converts to month-to month tenancy unless tenant pays weekly, then week-to-week |
Deposits | Limit 3 months rent; interest on deposit not required; deposit must be returned within 30 days of termination |
Discrimination | No discrimination on basis of race, religious creed, color, national origin, disability, ancestry, familial status, sex |
Uniform Residential Landlord & Tenant Act Adopted? | No |
Illegal Discrimination under Federal Law
The Federal Fair Housing Act places restrictions on the qualities landlords and home sellers can use when deciding who to place in a residence. No one can do any off the following based on race, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability:
This means that a landlord cannot charge more rent for an apartment to a person who needs the apartment to be handicap accessible. As well, a home seller cannot refuse to sell a home to a large family in a community that may not want children playing in the neighborhood. Landlords also cannot refuse to rent an apartment to a couple because they are unmarried.
Illegal Discrimination under Nevada Law
Nevada also makes it illegal to discriminate in the same ways that the federal Fair Housing Act forbids. Some additional methods of improper discrimination include: refusals to make reasonable accommodations to dwellings in order to improve access for someone with a disability, and refusals to make changes in rules and policies in order to allow better accessibility for a disabled person.
If you would like to know more about your rights and obligations when renting, there are many Nevada landlord-tenant attorneys who may be able to help. In addition to answering your questions about landlord-tenant law, they may be able to help you recover improperly held deposits, or enforce discrimination laws.