๐Ÿ“„ Templates & Resources

Free Lease Agreement Template (2026): Download, Customize & Protect Your Investment

Updated March 2026 ยท 14 min read ยท By PropertyCEO Team

A solid lease agreement is the single most important document in property management. It defines every aspect of the landlord-tenant relationship โ€” from rent amounts and due dates to maintenance responsibilities and lease termination conditions.

Yet too many landlords and property managers use outdated templates they found online in 2019, missing critical clauses that protect them in 2026. Worse, some use verbal agreements and hope for the best.

๐Ÿ’ก A well-drafted lease agreement doesn't just protect you legally โ€” it prevents 90% of tenant disputes before they happen. Every clause you skip is a potential $5,000+ headache.

Below, we provide a complete residential lease agreement template you can customize for your properties, plus a clause-by-clause breakdown of what to include and why it matters.

What Every Lease Agreement Must Include

Whether you manage 1 unit or 500, every residential lease agreement needs these core sections:

1. Parties & Property Identification

2. Lease Term

3. Rent & Payment Terms

4. Security Deposit

5. Maintenance & Repairs

6. Rules & Policies

7. Lease Violations & Termination

State-Specific Lease Requirements

Lease laws vary dramatically by state. Here are some of the most important variations:

ProvisionCommon RangeStates with Special Rules
Security deposit limit1-2 months' rentCA, NY, NJ, MA have strict caps
Deposit return timeline14-60 daysAZ (14 days), CA (21 days), NY (14 days)
Late fee caps$25-$100 or 5-10%NY, CA, TX have specific rules
Required disclosuresLead paint + variesCA requires ~20 disclosures
Notice to terminate30-60 daysNH (30 days), IL (30 days)
Rent controlNot applicableCA, NY, OR, NJ, DC, MD

โš ๏ธ Always verify your lease complies with your state and local laws. When in doubt, have a local real estate attorney review it. A $300 attorney review can save you $30,000 in litigation.

Sample Lease Agreement Template

Here's a comprehensive residential lease agreement template. Copy it, customize the bracketed fields, and adapt it to your state laws:

RESIDENTIAL LEASE AGREEMENT

This Residential Lease Agreement ("Lease") is entered into on [DATE], by and between:

LANDLORD: [Landlord/Company Legal Name], with a mailing address of [Landlord Address], hereinafter referred to as "Landlord."

TENANT(S): [Tenant Full Legal Name(s)], hereinafter collectively referred to as "Tenant."

PROPERTY: The premises located at [Full Property Address including Unit #] ("Premises").

1. LEASE TERM. This Lease begins on [Start Date] and ends on [End Date]. Upon expiration, this Lease shall automatically convert to a month-to-month tenancy unless either party provides [30/60] days' written notice of intent to terminate.

2. RENT. Tenant agrees to pay $[Amount] ([Amount in words]) per month, due on the [1st] of each month. Rent shall be paid via [accepted payment methods].

3. LATE FEES. If rent is not received by the [5th] of the month, a late fee of $[Amount] will be assessed. An additional $[Amount] per day may be charged for each day rent remains unpaid thereafter, up to a maximum of $[Amount].

4. SECURITY DEPOSIT. Tenant shall pay a security deposit of $[Amount] prior to move-in. The deposit will be held in [escrow account details if required] and returned within [state-required days] days of lease termination, minus any lawful deductions.

5. UTILITIES. Tenant is responsible for: [list utilities]. Landlord is responsible for: [list utilities].

6. MAINTENANCE. Tenant shall maintain the Premises in clean, sanitary condition and promptly report any needed repairs. Landlord shall maintain structural components, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and ensure habitability. Maintenance requests must be submitted via [method].

7. PETS. [Pets are / are not] permitted. If permitted: a pet deposit of $[Amount] and monthly pet rent of $[Amount] applies. Breed restrictions: [list any]. Maximum [number] pets.

8. ENTRY. Landlord may enter the Premises with [24/48] hours' written notice for inspections, repairs, or showings. Emergency entry does not require notice.

9. EARLY TERMINATION. Tenant may terminate this Lease early by providing [60] days' written notice and paying an early termination fee of $[Amount].

10. SIGNATURES.

Landlord: _________________________ Date: ___________

Tenant: _________________________ Date: ___________

Critical Clauses Most Landlords Forget

Renter's Insurance Requirement

Require tenants to carry renter's insurance (minimum $100K liability). It protects you when their guest trips on the stairs. Most policies cost tenants $15-30/month, so it's not an unreasonable ask.

Mold Disclosure & Prevention

Include a clause requiring tenants to report water leaks, condensation, or visible mold within 24 hours. This protects you from liability claims and catches problems early.

Right to Show During Final 60 Days

Reserve the right to show the unit to prospective tenants during the final 60 days of the lease. This minimizes vacancy between tenants.

HOA & Community Rules Compliance

If the property is in an HOA community, include a clause that the tenant agrees to comply with all HOA rules. Attach the rules as an addendum. This makes enforcement your tenant's responsibility, not just yours.

Bed Bug Clause

Include a clause confirming the unit is bed-bug-free at move-in and establishing responsibility for treatment if they appear. Many states now have specific bed bug disclosure requirements.

Digital vs. Paper Lease Agreements

In 2026, there's no reason to use paper leases. Digital lease platforms offer:

Popular platforms for digital lease management include AppFolio, Buildium, TurboTenant, and DocuSign. If you manage 20+ doors, invest in a property management platform that handles leases alongside rent collection and maintenance.

๐Ÿข Build a Property Management Business That Scales

Our Growth Playbook covers lease templates, tenant screening, marketing, and everything you need to grow from 0 to 200+ doors.

Get the complete playbook with 50+ templates โ†’ (30-day guarantee)

Common Lease Agreement Mistakes

  1. Using a generic template without state customization โ€” A California lease needs different clauses than a Texas lease. Always localize.
  2. Not listing all occupants โ€” Every adult living in the unit should be on the lease. Unnamed occupants can create liability gaps.
  3. Vague late fee language โ€” "A late fee may be assessed" is unenforceable in many states. Be specific: amount, when it applies, cap.
  4. Missing move-in/move-out inspection language โ€” Require documented inspections at both ends. Without them, you can't defend security deposit deductions.
  5. No clause for lease violations โ€” Spell out what happens when rules are broken. Include cure periods and escalation procedures.
  6. Ignoring fair housing laws โ€” Your lease cannot discriminate based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, or familial status. Review every clause through this lens.

When to Use an Attorney

While templates are great starting points, hire a local real estate attorney when:

A one-time attorney review costs $200-$500 and gives you a bulletproof template you can reuse across your portfolio.

Bottom Line

Your lease agreement is your first line of defense. A thorough, state-compliant lease prevents disputes, protects your investment, and sets clear expectations from day one.

Use the template above as your starting point. Customize it for your state, your property type, and your management style. And when in doubt, get a local attorney to review it.

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