What Is a Room Rental Agreement?
A room rental agreement is a straightforward, legally binding contract used when renting out a single room in a property. Typically, the landlord lives on-site and shares common areas like the kitchen and laundry room with the tenant.
This agreement outlines essential details, such as rent, rental duration, and house rules, to ensure everyone understands their responsibilities. By putting everything in writing, both parties gain clarity and extra protection, making disputes less likely and fostering a positive living environment.
Room Rental vs Roommate Agreements
When entering a housing arrangement, make sure you know the differences between the two. Otherwise, you could open yourself and your fellow tenants up to vague and undefined expectations and obligations.
Type | Room Rental Agreement | Roommate Agreement |
---|---|---|
Other Names | More similar to a "sublease agreement" | Referred to as a ‘housemate agreement,” or “roommate contract” |
Purpose | Used when a tenant wants to rent a room to a third party | Used when moving in with a new roommate, or have found a new roommate |
Does It Need Approval? | May need landlord's approval of the lease | Doesn't usually need landlord’s permission |
Parties Involved | Original tenant and new tenant | All roommates sharing the accommodation |
Legal Standing | New tenant has direct legal responsibilities to the original tenant | All roommates have legal responsibilities to each other |
Financial Responsibility | New tenant pays rent to the original tenant | Rent is usually split among all roommates and paid directly to the landlord |
Security Deposit | May require a separate deposit from the new tenant | Usually no additional deposit beyond what is already required by the landlord |
What to Include in a Room Rental Agreement
A simple room rental agreement will identify the following elements:
- Date: the dates the room rental agreement begins and ends
- Tenants: the contact information and identifying details of each tenant party to the agreement (the tenant leasing the premises is commonly referred to as the “Principal Tenant”)
- Premises: the address of the premises the sub-tenant is leasing
- Rent: the amount of rent and security deposit each tenant pays
- Obligations and duties: each tenant’s primary responsibilities, chores, and obligations under the lease
- Utilities: how the tenants will divide utilities (specifically, the name of the tenant or tenants who will be on various utility bills and how each tenant will pay)
- Parking: whether tenants can park on the premises and, if so, how many vehicles and parking spots are allotted to each
- Damages: each tenant’s responsibility for damages they or their guests may cause, and how tenants will share damage costs when they cannot reasonably trace the damage source to a particular tenant
- Renter’s insurance: whether or not the tenants will purchase renters’ insurance
- Smoking and alcohol use: smoking rules and tenant responsibility for maintaining reasonable standards of behavior and noise when consuming alcohol
- Various permissions: for example, whether pets or guests are allowed
Room rental agreements are sometimes referred to as ‘Room Lease Agreements” because the new tenant agrees to the terms and conditions of the original lease.
How to Write a Room Rental Agreement
A room rental agreement should clearly outline rent terms, house rules, and each party’s responsibilities to prevent disputes and provide legal protection. Legal Templates offers a customizable room rental agreement template to help you create a legally sound contract that fits your needs.
To draft your agreement, follow these steps:
1. Fill in Personal Details
Start by adding each party’s names and contact information. Include addresses, phone numbers, and any other relevant information, such as Social Security numbers or driver’s license numbers.
2. Set Clear Rental Terms
Define how much you expect the new tenant to pay for the room and rent payment frequency. You may also specify the rental duration and security deposit amount. Make sure to clarify when you’ll return the security deposit after the rental ends, and under what circumstances you can keep part (or all) of the deposit.
Include utility contributions in the lease by having the renter take a bill in their name or pay a set monthly amount.
3. Define House Rules & Responsibilities
Carefully consider any responsibilities or house rules you want the renter to follow. Some issues you might address in the agreement include:
- Chores: Any household duties you want the renter to take care of, and their frequency
- Guests: Whether the renter can entertain overnight guests in their room or shared spaces
- Entertaining: The maximum number of guests allowed at a time without previous approval
- Smoking and alcohol: Whether the renter can smoke or drink alcohol on the property
- Pets: Whether the renter can keep pets on the property, and whether a pet deposit is required
4. Add Any State-Required Disclosures
Some states require rental room agreements to include specific disclosures. For instance, some states have lead paint laws that the agreement should address. That’s in addition to the federally-mandated lead paint disclosure requirements under Title X.
5. Sign the Agreement
Once you finalize the agreement, schedule a meeting with the renter and sign it. All parties should sign the document and keep a copy for future reference.
Consequences of Not Having a Room Rental Agreement
Without a room rental agreement, you risk opening yourself and other tenants to severe financial consequences and wasted time, leading to serious headaches and stress or a potential lawsuit.
Below is a non-exhaustive list of the preventable suffering that a room rental agreement could help prevent and resolve.
Consequences | Common Situations |
---|---|
Lost Money | One party may end up stuck paying more rent, forfeiting a security deposit, or paying for damage to the property, because a party moved out early or unexpectedly without notice. |
Lost Time | If a tenant departs early and without notice, you could be tasked with an unexpected search for a replacement tenant. Or, maybe you and your tenant have a disagreement over noise levels after midnight. Without an agreement, you risk wasting time sorting these problems out at a later, inconvenient date. Additionally, you don't want to be cleaning up after your tenant hosts friends or a party, or from their general uncleanliness. |
Lost Property | Without a room rental agreement, personal property could be damaged or never returned. The agreement details the responsibility of each tenant for damages caused. |
Mental Anguish | Strained relationships are a common consequence of failing to outline a party's rights and obligations under a contract. A landlord could distrust you due to your tenant's behavior or lack of timely rental payments. Even a friendship with your tenant could deteriorate over small misunderstandings. |
Room rental agreements are practical tools for designating smoking areas and confirming whether or not alcohol is permitted on the premises.