Free Case Assessment

Your landlord has your deposit.
Here's how to get it back.

Every state has laws requiring landlords to return security deposits within a set deadline. Miss that deadline and they may owe you 2× or 3× the amount. Takes 2 minutes to check.

Check My Case →
44M
US renter households
41%
Report move-out deposit disputes
2–3×
Penalty in most states
Step 1 of 5

Which state did you rent in?

Step 2 of 5

When did you move out?

Within the last 14 days
15–30 days ago
31–60 days ago
More than 60 days ago
Step 3 of 5

Has your landlord returned any portion of your deposit?

No — nothing returned
Partial return only
Full return, but no itemized list of deductions
They returned some but I dispute the deductions
Step 4 of 5

Did your landlord send an itemized list of any deductions?

Yes, and it arrived on time
Yes, but it arrived after the deadline
No itemized list at all
Not sure
Step 5 of 5

How much was your security deposit?

Under $500
$500–$1,000
$1,000–$2,000
Over $2,000

Your Action Plan

🔒

Get Your Demand Letter

A state-specific certified mail demand letter with the exact legal language your landlord must respond to. $19 flat fee — far less than an attorney's hourly rate.

State Deposit Recovery Guides

Deep-dive guides for the 10 largest renter states — exact statutes, penalty formulas, landlord tactics, and small claims instructions.

California
21 days · $600 penalty + actual damages
Read California Guide →
New York
14 days NYC · Forfeits all deductions
Read New York Guide →
Texas
30 days · $100 + 3× wrongfully withheld
Read Texas Guide →
Florida
15–30 days · Forfeits all deductions if late
Read Florida Guide →
Illinois
30 days Chicago / 45 days statewide · 2× deposit
Read Illinois Guide →
Washington
21 days · 2× deposit + attorney fees
Read Washington Guide →
Georgia
30 days · 3× deposit if willful violation
Read Georgia Guide →
Arizona
14 days · 2× wrongfully withheld
Read Arizona Guide →
North Carolina
30 days · Forfeits all deduction rights
Read North Carolina Guide →
Massachusetts
30 days · 3× deposit + attorney fees
Read Massachusetts Guide →
State-by-State Deadlines

Most states require landlords to return deposits within 14–30 days. Missing the deadline — even by one day — may void their right to make any deductions.

California
21
days to return
Actual damages + $600 penalty
New York
14
days to return
Forfeits right to deductions
Texas
30
days to return
$100 + 3× wrongfully withheld
Florida
15–30
days to return
Forfeits all deductions
Washington
21
days to return
2× deposit + attorney fees
Arizona
14
days to return
2× wrongfully withheld
Massachusetts
30
days to return
3× deposit + attorney fees
Colorado
30–60
days to return
3× wrongfully withheld
How Small Claims Court Works

You don't need a lawyer. Most deposit disputes are exactly what small claims court was designed for.

StepWhat HappensTimelineCost
Send demand letterGive landlord one last chance to pay before filingDay 1$0 (we generate it)
File in small claimsGo to your local courthouse, fill out a simple formDay 15$30–$100 filing fee
Serve the landlordCourt notifies landlord of hearing dateDay 15–20$0–$25
HearingJudge decides — typically 15 minutes, no lawyers neededDay 30–60$0
Collect judgmentIf you win, landlord must pay or face wage garnishmentAfter hearingFiling fee reimbursed