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PIKE
Housing

Get my security deposit back

When your landlord won't return your deposit or sends a vague itemized list of damages.

4 documentsAbout 15 minutes7 questions to answer
What's in the pack
Demand letter to landlord
Letter, 1 page
01
Move-out walkthrough notes
Notes for your records
02
Small claims worksheet
Worksheet, 2 pages
03
Photo evidence index
Index, 1 page
04
Pike doesn't sign for you.These documents are drafted from the facts you provide. You read them, you sign them, you send them. Pike never claims to be your lawyer.
Save and come back any time.

Your deposit is your money. The landlord is holding it for a specific list of reasons — and 'didn't bother to itemize' is not one of them.

Who this pack is for

You moved out, your landlord won't return your security deposit, and you suspect they don't have a real reason. Maybe you got a vague itemization back — 'cleaning,' 'damage,' a flat fee — without receipts. Maybe you got nothing at all. You want the deposit returned in full, or you want a defensible itemization showing exactly what was deducted and why. You're willing to file in small claims court if it comes to that, but you'd rather not have to.

When to use it

Use this pack within the deposit-return window your state allows — typically 14 to 60 days after move-out depending on the jurisdiction. Sending a written demand starts the paper trail and, in many states, triggers statutory penalties (often two to three times the deposit) if the landlord still doesn't respond. The longer you wait, the harder it is to prove the unit's condition at move-out, especially if the landlord has already re-rented and any 'damage' is now under a new tenant's wear. Send the letter certified mail with return receipt; small claims judges weigh that proof of delivery heavily.

What it doesn't cover

This pack handles a residential security deposit dispute where the underlying tenancy has ended cleanly. It does not handle disputes that are still entangled with an active eviction, where the deposit may be applied to past-due rent the court is still adjudicating. It does not draft a small-claims complaint — that's the court's form, varies by county, and you file it after this letter goes unanswered. If the landlord is alleging more than $1,000 in damage, take photos of your photos to a tenant attorney before you file; the case might be worth more than small-claims jurisdiction allows in your state.

State-specific notes

Rules vary by jurisdiction. Below are notes for the states where get my security deposit back runs into the most variance. If your state isn't listed, default to your state's tenant-rights handbook or local legal aid.

California (CA)
California requires the landlord to return the deposit (or itemize deductions with receipts for any deduction over $125) within 21 days of move-out (Cal. Civ. Code § 1950.5). Bad-faith retention exposes the landlord to statutory damages of up to twice the deposit on top of the actual amount owed.
New York (NY)
New York requires return within 14 days of move-out, with itemization (N.Y. Gen. Oblig. Law § 7-108). If the landlord misses the 14-day window, they forfeit the right to make any deduction at all — the statute is strict liability on timing, not just on the deduction itself.
Texas (TX)
Texas gives the landlord 30 days after surrender of the unit to return the deposit with itemization (Tex. Prop. Code § 92.103–§ 92.109). Bad-faith retention can subject the landlord to $100 + three times the wrongfully withheld portion + reasonable attorney fees. You must have provided a forwarding address to claim these damages.
Florida (FL)
Florida gives the landlord 15 days to return an undisputed deposit, or 30 days to send written notice of intent to claim against the deposit (Fla. Stat. § 83.49). If you object in writing within 15 days of receiving that notice, the landlord must file suit to keep the disputed amount. No-notice retention forfeits the entire deposit.
Illinois (IL)
Chicago and other Illinois jurisdictions impose stricter timelines under local ordinances than the state default. Chicago's RLTO requires return or itemization within 30 days of move-out and pays the tenant 2× the deposit + attorney fees on bad-faith retention. Outside of Chicago, the state-level Security Deposit Return Act applies only to buildings of 5+ units.
Massachusetts (MA)
Massachusetts is one of the strictest states (Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 186 § 15B). The landlord must hold the deposit in a separate interest-bearing account, give you a receipt, return it within 30 days with detailed itemization for any deductions, and produce sworn estimates for any damage claimed. Violations expose the landlord to triple damages plus attorney fees.

Common questions

What can a landlord legally deduct from my deposit?
Most states allow deductions for: unpaid rent, unpaid utilities the landlord is on the hook for, damage beyond ordinary wear and tear, and the cost of cleaning the unit beyond the condition it was in at move-in. 'Ordinary wear' — faded paint, worn carpet from foot traffic, small nail holes — is not deductible. The landlord must usually provide receipts or estimates for any work claimed.
I never got an itemization. What does that get me?
In many states, a landlord who doesn't itemize within the statutory window forfeits the right to make any deduction. They have to return the whole deposit, even if there was real damage. New York's 14-day rule and several other states are strict on this — the deadline is the deadline. Send the demand letter and cite the statute.
How do I prove the unit was clean when I left?
Move-out photos with a date stamp are the strongest evidence. A signed move-out walkthrough sheet from the landlord or property manager is gold. Witness testimony — a friend who helped you move out — also helps. The pack drafts a walkthrough notes document precisely so you have something written down before you hand back the keys.
What's small claims court actually like?
Informal — no jury, no formal rules of evidence, you and the landlord stand at a podium and tell your stories to a judge or magistrate. Most states have a maximum claim limit between $5,000 and $10,000, which is more than enough for a deposit case. Filing fees range from about $30 to $100 (waivable if you qualify — Pike has a separate pack for that). Hearings happen within a few weeks of filing in most jurisdictions.
The landlord deducted for 'cleaning' — is that allowed?
Routine cleaning between tenants is generally the landlord's cost of doing business, not a deductible damage. Deep cleaning to address a unit left dirty beyond reasonable use is deductible. Several states require receipts for cleaning charges, and many require the landlord to show the unit was cleaner at move-in than at move-out, using the move-in inspection sheet you (hopefully) signed. If they didn't do a move-in inspection with you, that's your leverage.
What if my landlord went out of business or sold the property?
The deposit follows the property. When a landlord sells a rental, the deposit must be transferred to the new owner along with notice to you in most states. If the landlord pocketed it instead, your claim is against the original landlord and possibly the new owner depending on state law. Demand letters should go to whoever currently controls the property; consult legal aid if it's complicated.
Should I take a partial settlement to avoid court?
Often yes. A settlement of 70–80% of your deposit, in your hand within a week, is usually better than a 100% judgment you have to chase for months. Landlords know this too, which is why a credible threat of small claims often produces a settlement offer right after they receive the demand letter. Decide your floor before you negotiate.

Pike provides plain-language legal information, not legal advice. State and local rules change. If money, custody, or your housing is on the line, talk to a licensed attorney or your local legal aid office.