FTC Cracks Down on Hidden Rental Fees: Renters, Speak Up!
Published Date: 3/13/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The FTC is looking into sneaky rental housing fees that might trick renters. They want to stop landlords from hiding extra costs or charging fees without clear permission. If you rent or rent out, your feedback by April 13, 2026, could help shape new rules that make renting fairer and clearer for everyone.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
Enforcement, Penalties, and Redress
The Commission says a new rule would let it seek civil penalties and obtain consumer redress more readily for unlawful rental fee practices. The ANPRM notes civil penalties of up to $53,088 per violation under the FTC Act and gives examples of past remedies where companies agreed to pay $48 million and $23 million in consumer redress. This could mean more refunds for renters and larger liability for rental housing providers if a rule is adopted.
Require Total Rent Disclosure
The FTC is asking whether a rule should require rental ads to show the total rent including all mandatory fees and charges whenever a price is quoted. If adopted, you would see the full monthly cost up front instead of discovering mandatory recurring or one-time fees later. The Commission solicits comments through April 13, 2026, about the costs and benefits of such a rule.
Ban Fees Without Express Consent
The FTC is considering rules to stop rental housing providers from billing fees or charging for goods or services without a renter's express, informed consent. If adopted, you would not be billed for fees that you did not clearly agree to pay when signing up or while renting. The Commission requests evidence and comments by April 13, 2026.
Stop Misleading Fee Descriptions
The FTC is exploring rules to prohibit misrepresenting fees—such as calling mandatory fees optional, hiding a fee's nature or purpose, or advertising a low rent that excludes mandatory charges. If a rule is adopted, you would be entitled to clearer information about what each listed fee actually is and whether it is required. The ANPRM asks for data and examples and closes for comment on April 13, 2026.
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