TL;DR: Before signing a lease, check the property, read the entire contract, understand what your deposit covers, and know your statutory rights as a tenant. In every jurisdiction, the law protects tenants — but only if you know your rights before you sign.
Renting your first apartment is a significant financial and legal commitment. The lease you sign creates a binding contract that can be difficult and expensive to exit early. The deposit you pay — which may be one to three months' rent in many jurisdictions — is money that can legally be withheld if you breach your obligations. And the property you're moving into may have undisclosed issues that become your problem once you've signed.
The good news: tenant protection laws in the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the US are comprehensive. Understanding them before you sign gives you significant leverage during the negotiation phase and clarity about your rights if things go wrong later.
This checklist-format guide takes you from finding a property to signing the lease and moving in, with jurisdiction-specific guidance throughout.
Prepare your documentation. Landlords and letting agents will typically require:
In the US, credit checks are standard; in the UK, referencing is typically conducted through specialist referencing agencies; in France, landlords may request a full dossier including payslips for the last three months, tax notices, and an employment contract.
Know your budget. As a rule of thumb, monthly rent should not exceed 30–35% of your net monthly income. Some landlords use this as a formal minimum income threshold for acceptance.
Do not be rushed. Take your time and check:
Take photographs with timestamps of any existing damage before you move in. This is your most important protection against unfair deposit deductions.
Never sign a lease without reading it in full. Key clauses to examine:
Rent and rent review: What is the current rent? When and how can it increase? Some tenancies have rent review clauses; others are fixed for the lease term.
Term: Is it a fixed-term tenancy (typically 6 or 12 months) or a periodic tenancy? What happens at the end of the fixed term — does it automatically roll to a periodic tenancy?
Break clauses: Does the tenancy have a break clause allowing either party to end it before the fixed term expires? What notice is required?
Deposit: How much? What scheme is it protected in (UK)? When and on what grounds can deductions be made?
Permitted alterations: Can you hang pictures, paint walls, install shelves? What restoration obligations exist?
Subletting: Can you sublet any part of the property or take in lodgers? Usually a landlord's consent is required.
Permitted occupiers: Who is permitted to live in the property? Adding people not named in the tenancy without consent can breach the lease.
Pet clause: Are pets permitted? If so, under what conditions?
An inventory — a detailed schedule of the property's condition and contents at the start of the tenancy — is essential. If the landlord does not provide one, create your own and send it to them in writing. Photograph everything. Note any existing damage, no matter how minor. An agreed inventory protects both parties but particularly the tenant at the end of the tenancy.
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Try it free →| Country | Typical Deposit | Protected? | Notice to End | Key Statute | Key Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | 5 weeks' rent | Yes (TDP scheme) | 2 months (landlord) / 1 month (tenant) | Housing Act 1988 | gov.uk/private-renting |
| 🇫🇷 France | 1 month (unfurnished) / 2 months (furnished) | Via caisse des dépôts | 3 months (landlord) / 1 month (tenant) | Loi Alur | service-public.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/N549 |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Max 3 months | No mandatory scheme | 3 months (either party) | Jordabalken | hyresnamnden.se |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | 4 weeks (most states) | Yes (bond authority) | 30–90 days (landlord) | State tenancy acts | tenants.org.au |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | 4 weeks | Yes (TBond) | 42 days (landlord) / 21 days (tenant) | Residential Tenancies Act 1986 | tenancy.govt.nz |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | 1 month (varies by province) | Ontario: LTB holds | 60 days (Ontario landlord) | Provincial legislation | canada.ca/housing |
| 🇺🇸 USA | 1–3 months (state-specific) | Some states | Varies by state | State landlord-tenant acts | hud.gov/topics/rental-assistance |
Use our tools to prepare your rental documents and understand your obligations:
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified housing solicitor or attorney.
Q: Can a landlord charge me fees in addition to rent and deposit?
A: In the UK, the Tenant Fees Act 2019 prohibits most fees beyond rent, deposit (capped at 5 weeks' rent), holding deposit (capped at 1 week's rent), and certain default fees (e.g., replacement keys). In other jurisdictions, letting agency fees vary — in France, fees are capped; in many US states there is no cap. Check local rules before agreeing to pay any fees.
Q: What is a guarantor and do I need one?
A: A guarantor is someone (often a parent) who agrees to pay the rent if the tenant defaults. Landlords typically require a guarantor if you are a student, have limited rental history, or your income is below the landlord's affordability threshold. A guarantor agreement is a separate legal document — the guarantor should read it carefully before signing, as it creates a significant financial commitment.
Q: Can I back out after signing the lease?
A: Generally no — once signed, the lease is a binding contract. There is no general "cooling off" period for residential tenancies in most jurisdictions (unlike some consumer contracts). Breaking a fixed-term lease early can result in liability for rent for the remainder of the term and loss of deposit. Some leases include break clauses — check for these.
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