A residential lease is a contract written by lawyers for landlords — and it's between 6 and 30 pages of fine print before you ever sign your name. Most renters skim it and sign. The cost: surprise fees, automatic renewals, deposits you can't get back, and clauses that quietly transfer the landlord's responsibilities onto you. This guide walks through every section in a typical lease, what it really means, and the seven clauses you should slow down on. PaperLens can read your specific lease in about ten seconds and flag the ones that matter — but knowing what to look for is half the battle.
Term, rent, and the security deposit
The first page tells you three numbers: how long the lease lasts, what you pay each month, and the deposit. Read these like a contract, not a quote. The 'term' is the period you legally owe rent; if you move out early without a break clause, you usually owe the rest. The rent should match what you negotiated — verify pet rent, parking, storage, utility add-ons aren't quietly bundled in. The security deposit is held in trust by the landlord (in most states it earns interest you're entitled to). Many states cap it: California limits it to one month's rent for unfurnished units; Massachusetts to one month plus interest. If the lease asks for two or three months, the clause may be unenforceable in your state — but you still have to fight it back.
Auto-renewal and notice to vacate
This is where most renters lose. A clause near the end says: 'this lease will automatically convert to month-to-month at the end of the term unless tenant gives X days written notice.' X is typically 60 or 90 days. If you forget — and most people do — you're locked into another month, often at a higher rate the landlord can set unilaterally. Set a calendar reminder for 90 days before your end date. If you want to leave, send the notice in writing (email is usually fine) and keep the receipt. If the lease says renewal happens at the 'then-prevailing market rate' without a cap, that's a high-risk clause; landlords have used it to raise rent 30%+.
Maintenance, repairs, and the warranty of habitability
Every state has a 'warranty of habitability': the landlord must keep the unit livable — heat, water, working plumbing, no infestations, weatherproof walls. The lease cannot waive this. But many leases try to push routine repairs onto the tenant: 'tenant is responsible for all repairs under $200', 'tenant maintains all appliances at their cost'. Some of this is fine for tenant negligence; broader clauses are often unenforceable. Look for the words 'reasonable wear and tear' — they're your friend. If the lease lists you as responsible for things that should be the landlord's (water heater, HVAC, structural), make notes.
The fees nobody mentions
Beyond rent, leases bake in fees: pet fees (often non-refundable), late fees (usually 5–10% of monthly rent after a 5-day grace period), 'amenity fees', 'pool keys', 'move-in administration', and the increasingly common 'resident benefit package' — $30–$50/month for filters and renter's insurance whether you want it or not. Add them up before signing; one tenant we audited was paying $89/month in fees on top of $1,800 rent. Some are negotiable, especially in soft rental markets. All should be itemized in the lease — if a fee shows up in the move-in invoice that wasn't in the lease, you can refuse it.
Subletting, guests, and what counts as 'occupants'
Most leases require landlord written consent before subletting. They also limit 'guests' — usually 14 days per 6 months. If your partner moves in for 4 nights a week, technically you're violating most leases; this is rarely enforced unless the landlord wants you out. The 'occupants' clause names everyone who can live there. Adding a roommate without consent is a lease violation. If you might host long-term, ask before signing — a small amendment is easier than the eviction notice.
Entry, inspection, and the landlord's right to come in
State law usually requires 24–48 hours notice before entry except for emergencies. Some leases try to set this lower or vague. The lease cannot override state law — but a clause saying 'tenant agrees to allow showings during the final 60 days at any time with reasonable notice' will be enforced by most courts. If your lease has this and you're a private person, negotiate for 24-hour written notice and weekend showings excluded.
Termination, defaults, and what happens if you break the lease
If you have to leave early, the lease specifies a penalty: typically two months' rent plus loss of deposit, or you remain on the hook until the unit re-rents. In tenant-friendly states (California, Oregon, Washington), the landlord has a duty to mitigate — they must reasonably try to re-rent. If they don't try, your liability ends. The 'default' clause lists what counts as a breach: late rent, unauthorized pets, smoking, disturbance. A 'cure period' (3–10 days to fix it) is standard; if your lease has none and threatens immediate termination on first default, that's aggressive — push back.
PaperLens provides informational summaries only and is not a substitute for legal, medical, or financial advice. Your documents are private and never used for AI training.