The rent of an apartment can be raised as often and as high as the landlord feels like. All he has to do, is give prior notice to the tenants.
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Legally, in the United States, lot rent can only be raised by $200.00 at one time. However, there is no limit as to how much a landlord can raise rent per year.
Legally, in the United States, lot rent can only be raised by $200.00 at one time. However, there is no limit as to how much a landlord can raise rent per year.
This is more of a rent control question. Most states are not rent-controlled, but many jurisdictions within those states may be. If that is the case, then the rent cannot be any higher than the amount that is controlled by the jurisdiction. Otherwise, as is the case in most states, the rent can be as high as the landlord wants: it would be up to you, the tenant, to decide whether you want to pay the increased amount. If not, then you must vacate premises.
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There is no rule that says the Landlord must raise the rent for everyone if he is raising it. But if you suspect that your rent is being raised for retaliatory reasons you can challenge that in court.
It depends on your lease. If you don't have a lease, the rent can be raised at any time by any amount. If you do have a lease, check the lease. If their are limits raising the rent in the lease, then you can bring that to your landlord's attention. If they raise your rate more than what's in the lease, then you can sue them in order to get them to comply with the lease. If there are no limits identified in the lease, then the rent can be raised at any time by any amount.
I'm not sure about Connecticut law, but I don't know of a state that has a limit on how much the rent can be raised. The landlord has to give proper notice - which would be one full rental period - so the tenant has time to leave if they don't want to pay the new rent. But, once they've done that, they can raise the rent as much as they want.
I'm not sure about Connecticut law, but I don't know of a state that has a limit on how much the rent can be raised. The landlord has to give proper notice - which would be one full rental period - so the tenant has time to leave if they don't want to pay the new rent. But, once they've done that, they can raise the rent as much as they want.
Your rent cannot be raised during the term of your lease. If you're applying for tenancy and the rent is raised, then the unit is being offered at that rate. You can accept it as such, perhaps negotiate with the landlord to lower the rent to which you will sign the lease, or refuse to sign and cancel your tenancy offer.
They will pay the rent desired, provided it's within the Fair Market Rent value of the rent being sought, minus the family's share of the rent, which is determined by family size and income.