How to Raise Rent Without Losing Good Tenants
Most landlords and property managers avoid raising rent because they're afraid of losing a good tenant. So they let rent lag behind market for 2, 3, sometimes 5 years — leaving thousands of dollars on the table every single year.
Here's the reality: tenants expect rent increases. The ones who leave over a reasonable increase were going to leave anyway. The ones who stay are actually relieved it wasn't more.
This guide covers when to raise rent, how much, the legal requirements, and exactly how to communicate it so you keep your best tenants and your margins healthy.
When to Raise Rent
The Right Times
- At lease renewal — This is the standard time. 60-90 days before expiration, present the renewal with updated terms.
- When you're significantly below market — If comparable units are renting for 10-20% more, you need to correct that.
- After property improvements — New appliances, renovated common areas, or upgraded amenities justify an increase.
- When operating costs increase — Property taxes up 15%? Insurance doubled? Pass some of that through.
- Annually (if month-to-month) — Just because there's no lease expiration doesn't mean rent stays frozen.
The Wrong Times
- Mid-lease — Unless your lease specifically allows it, you can't raise rent during a fixed-term lease. Period.
- Right after a complaint — This looks retaliatory and could violate state anti-retaliation laws.
- When you have multiple vacancies — Fix the vacancy problem first. A filled unit at current rent beats an empty one at higher rent.
How Much to Raise Rent
The magic number depends on your market, but here are general guidelines:
| Increase Amount | When It's Appropriate | Tenant Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| 2-3% | Annual cost-of-living adjustment | Most tenants accept without pushback |
| 4-6% | Moderate market increase + minor improvements | Some questions, rarely causes moves |
| 7-10% | Significant below-market correction | Expect some turnover (5-15%) |
| 10%+ | Major renovation or severe under-pricing | Higher turnover risk — weigh vacancy cost |
💡 The turnover math: Losing a tenant typically costs $2,000-4,000 (vacancy, turnover costs, make-ready, marketing). If your rent increase generates less than that annually, a moderate increase + retention is usually the better play.
How to Determine the Right Amount
- Pull market comps — Check what similar units in your area are renting for right now. Use Zillow, Rentometer, or simply browse Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace.
- Calculate your operating cost increase — If your costs went up 5%, you need at least 5% more rent to maintain margins.
- Assess the tenant — Great tenant who pays on time, no complaints, takes care of the property? Consider a smaller increase. Problematic tenant? Market rate or higher.
- Consider the gap — If you're 15% below market, don't try to close the gap in one increase. Two years of 8% increases are easier to swallow than one 15% jump.
Legal Requirements by State
Rent increase laws vary dramatically by state and city. Here's what you need to know:
Notice Periods
- Most states: 30 days written notice for month-to-month tenancies
- Some states (CA, NY, OR, etc.): 60-90 days for increases above a certain percentage
- Rent-controlled cities: Specific limits on amount AND timing — check local ordinances
Rent Control / Stabilization
If your property is in a rent-controlled jurisdiction (NYC, SF, LA, Portland, etc.), annual increases are typically capped at 3-10% depending on local rules. Check your local ordinances before increasing rent. Violations carry steep penalties.
⚠️ Always provide written notice. Verbal rent increases are unenforceable and create confusion. Use certified mail or hand-deliver with a signed acknowledgment.
Rent Increase Letter Template
📋 Sample Rent Increase Notice
[Date]
[Tenant Name]
[Property Address]
Dear [Tenant Name],
Thank you for being a valued tenant at [property address]. We appreciate your tenancy and hope you've enjoyed living here.
As your current lease term ends on [date], we'd like to offer you a renewal. Due to increased operating costs (property taxes, insurance, and maintenance), we'll be adjusting the monthly rent from $[current rent] to $[new rent], effective [date — at least 30/60 days out].
This represents a [X]% increase, which remains competitive with comparable units in the area currently renting for $[market comp] – $[market comp].
We'd love to have you continue as a tenant. Please sign and return the attached renewal lease by [deadline]. If you have any questions, don't hesitate to reach out.
Sincerely,
[Your name / company name]
[Phone] [Email]
Communication Strategies That Reduce Pushback
1. Frame It as Market-Based, Not Personal
"Comparable units in the area are renting for $1,400-1,500. Your new rate of $1,350 keeps you below market." This removes emotion and provides objective context.
2. Give Plenty of Notice
60-90 days is better than the legal minimum of 30. It shows respect and gives tenants time to plan — or decide to stay.
3. Pair the Increase with Value
"Along with the lease renewal, we've scheduled [new appliance installation / painting / carpet cleaning]." Even small improvements make an increase feel fair.
4. Offer a Longer Lease at a Lower Increase
"Your rent increases to $1,400/month on a 12-month renewal — or $1,375/month if you sign for 18 months." This rewards commitment and reduces your vacancy risk.
5. Don't Apologize
Never say "I'm sorry, but we need to raise rent." You're running a business. Market rates went up. Operating costs went up. An adjustment is normal and expected.
What If a Tenant Pushes Back?
It happens. Here's how to handle it:
- "I can't afford it." — Empathize, but don't negotiate unless they're an exceptional tenant. Offer the longer-lease discount if you have one.
- "Nothing has changed, why is rent going up?" — "Property taxes increased X%, insurance went up Y%, and the market has moved. We're keeping your rent below market at [new rate]."
- "I'll move out." — That's their right. Do the turnover math. If the cost of turnover exceeds the annual increase, consider a smaller bump. If not, wish them well.
- "My neighbor pays less." — "Each lease is negotiated individually based on timing, lease length, and terms. Your rate reflects current market conditions."
Master the Business Side of Property Management
The PropertyCEO Growth Playbook includes rent increase scripts, renewal templates, and retention strategies that keep occupancy above 95%.
Get the complete playbook with 50+ templates → (30-day guarantee)The Real Cost of NOT Raising Rent
Let's do the math. Say you're $100/month below market on 10 units and you avoid the increase:
- Year 1: $100 × 10 units × 12 months = $12,000 lost
- Year 2: Market moves another 3%. Now you're $136 under × 10 × 12 = $16,320 lost
- Year 3: The gap compounds. $175 under × 10 × 12 = $21,000 lost
Over 3 years, that's nearly $50,000 in lost revenue from just 10 units. And it gets harder to correct the longer you wait — because a $175 increase feels shocking to a tenant, while three annual $50-60 increases barely register.
Bottom Line
Raising rent is not adversarial. It's a normal, expected part of renting — just like groceries and gas prices go up. The key is doing it consistently, communicating clearly, and keeping your rates in line with the market.
Annual small increases are always better than occasional large ones. Start this cycle now — even if it's "only" 3%. Your future self (and your P&L statement) will thank you.
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