State deadlines

State security-deposit deadlines & penalties

5 min · updated June 16, 2026

Use this table to fill in the real deadline, statute citation, and penalty in your demand letters. Pull the number for your state and quote the statute — that’s what makes a letter work.

Verify before you rely on it. Landlord-tenant law changes and varies by city. These figures are checked against the statutes and official sources, but treat them as a starting point and confirm your state’s current statute before citing it. This is general information, not legal advice. Not all 50 states are listed — if yours isn’t here, search “[your state] security deposit return statute.”

Return deadlines & penalties by state

StateReturn deadlineStatutePenalty for wrongful withholdingKey requirement
California21 daysCal. Civ. Code § 1950.5Up to deposit (bad faith) + actual damagesItemized statement; receipts for deductions over $125
Texas30 daysTex. Prop. Code §§ 92.103, 92.109$100 + 3× wrongfully-withheld + attorney’s fees (bad faith)Clock starts only after you give a written forwarding address
Florida15 days (no claim) / 30 days to mail notice of claimFla. Stat. § 83.49No multiplier — missing notice forfeits the claim; prevailing party gets attorney’s feesNotice of claim sent by certified mail
New York14 daysN.Y. Gen. Oblig. Law § 7-108Forfeits right to keep any; up to 2× if willful + actualLandlord bears burden of proving deductions
Illinois30 days (itemize) / 45 days (return)765 ILCS 710 deposit + costs + attorney’s fees (bad faith)Applies to buildings with 5+ units
Pennsylvania30 days68 P.S. § 250.512Failing to itemize forfeits withholding; the wrongfully-withheld amountGive a forwarding address to start the duty
Ohio30 daysOhio Rev. Code § 5321.16 wrongfully-withheld + attorney’s feesWritten forwarding address needed to recover damages/fees
Georgia30 days (one month)O.C.G.A. §§ 44-7-34, 44-7-35 the sum wrongfully withheld + attorney’s fees (bad faith)Inspection rules apply to landlords with 10+ units
North Carolina30 days (interim) / 60 days (final)N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 42-52, 42-55No multiplier — willful failure forfeits all deductions + actual damages + fees60 days only if exact amount can’t be determined in 30
Michigan30 daysMich. Comp. Laws §§ 554.609, 554.613 the amount wrongfully retained (bad faith)Forwarding address in writing within 4 days of moving out
New Jersey30 daysN.J.S.A. 46:8-21.1 (double) the amount wrongfully withheld + costs + (discretionary) feesDeductions and interest must be itemized
Virginia45 daysVa. Code § 55.1-1226Actual damages + attorney’s fees (confirm bad-faith penalty in the statute)Itemized written notice required
Washington30 daysRCW 59.18.280Full deposit; court may award up to 2× for intentional refusal + fees”Full and specific” statement with estimates/invoices
Arizona14 business days (after your demand)A.R.S. § 33-1321 the amount wrongfully withheldClock runs from move-out + your written demand
Massachusetts30 daysM.G.L. c.186 § 15B (treble) deposit + interest + costs + attorney’s feesItemized list sworn under pains and penalties of perjury, with receipts
Colorado30 days (lease may extend to 60)Colo. Rev. Stat. § 38-12-103 (treble) wrongfully-withheld + attorney’s fees (willful)Must give 7 days’ written notice before suing
Maryland45 daysMd. Code, Real Prop. § 8-203Up to the wrongfully-withheld amount + attorney’s feesWritten list of damages; you may request a move-out inspection
Oregon31 daysORS § 90.300 the wrongfully-withheld amountWritten accounting required
Minnesota21 daysMinn. Stat. § 504B.178Amount withheld + interest, plus punitive up to $500 (not a multiplier)Clock runs from later of lease end or receipt of your address
TennesseeSee statute (no single fixed return-day count; 60-day reclaim rule)Tenn. Code § 66-28-301No statutory multiplier — return + available damagesInspection/dispute mechanism — verify the timeline for your situation

How to use this in a letter

  1. Find your state’s deadline and confirm it has passed (count from your move-out date, or from when you gave a forwarding address if your state requires that).
  2. Copy the statute citation verbatim into your formal demand letter.
  3. State the penalty accurately — only the multiplier your state actually provides. Overstating it (“you owe me 3×!” in a 2× state) hurts your credibility.
  4. Note any special requirement (written forwarding address, receipts, pre-suit notice) and make sure you’ve satisfied it.

Notes & recent changes

When in doubt, read the statute. Every citation above links to a publicly searchable law. Pull it up, confirm the current deadline and penalty, and cite it exactly — or ask your local legal aid or tenants’ union, which often has a free state-specific deposit guide.

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