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Illegal Lease Clauses in Massachusetts: A Renter’s Guide

Massachusetts law restricts 5 lease clause types in our database, including waiver of implied warranty of habitability and waiver of tenant rights. Here is what to search for before you sign—and what to document if you already did.

Citations for MassachusettsPublished July 14, 202612 min read
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Educational information: This guide is not legal advice. Its state-specific facts come from Lease Snipe’s statute-cited Massachusetts law record, last reviewed January 1, 2024. Laws and local ordinances change, so confirm the current rule before withholding rent, moving out, or filing a claim.

What Massachusetts Renters Should Check First

The clause that costs a renter the most is rarely the loudest one on the page. It is often a notice deadline buried under “renewal,” a repair sentence that shifts an owner’s obligation, or a fee defined several pages away from the rent. Recent renter research keeps surfacing the same pressure points: upfront costs, delayed repairs, surprise fees, changed renewal terms, and getting the deposit back.

In Massachusetts, our law database tracks 5 restricted clause types and 4 required disclosures. Read the statute- backed flags below first, then use the search checklist to catch the expensive terms that may be legal but still deserve negotiation.

Illegal, Unenforceable, and Questionable Clauses in Massachusetts

A clause can be a problem for different reasons. Some provisions may directly conflict with a statute; others may be declined enforcement by a court or need fact-specific review. These labels stay deliberately cautious:

Likely IllegalMay conflict with your state's law — the kind of clause a court could decline to enforce, even if you signed. Worth checking against the statute.
Often UnenforceableNot a clear-cut ban, but a court may decline to enforce it as written. Worth questioning before you rely on it.
QuestionableOften legal, but easy to misread or use against you. Worth understanding and, frequently, worth asking about before you sign.
Likely IllegalVerdict

Waiver of implied warranty of habitability

In plain English

Waiver of implied warranty of habitability is tied to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 14 in our Massachusetts law record. Lease Snipe flags language attempting this as likely illegal; a signature does not automatically make a prohibited term lawful.

Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 14leasesnipe.com
Likely IllegalVerdict

Waiver of tenant rights

In plain English

Waiver of tenant rights is tied to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15 in our Massachusetts law record. Lease Snipe flags language attempting this as likely illegal; a signature does not automatically make a prohibited term lawful.

Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15leasesnipe.com
Likely IllegalVerdict

Confession of judgment clause

In plain English

Confession of judgment clause is tied to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15 in our Massachusetts law record. Lease Snipe flags language attempting this as likely illegal; a signature does not automatically make a prohibited term lawful.

Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15leasesnipe.com
Likely IllegalVerdict

Non-refundable security deposit

In plain English

Non-refundable security deposit is tied to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15B in our Massachusetts law record. Lease Snipe flags language attempting this as likely illegal; a signature does not automatically make a prohibited term lawful.

Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15Bleasesnipe.com
Likely IllegalVerdict

Security deposit exceeding one month

In plain English

Security deposit exceeding one month is tied to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15B in our Massachusetts law record. Lease Snipe flags language attempting this as likely illegal; a signature does not automatically make a prohibited term lawful.

Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15Bleasesnipe.com
Do not want to hunt through every page?Upload your lease and check its language against the Massachusetts rules in our database.
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Massachusetts Deposits, Entry Notice, and Late Fees

Massachusetts at a glance

Start with the numbers and deadlines most likely to affect your wallet or privacy.

  • Security deposit limit: 1 month's rent
  • Deposit return deadline: 30 days
  • Interest on deposits: required
  • Landlord entry notice: 24 hours typical ("reasonable notice" standard)
  • Late-fee rule: no statutory percentage cap
  • Rent grace period: 30 days

Read the qualifiers, not just the number

Maximum 1 month rent (separate from first/last month rent and key deposit). Must be held in separate interest-bearing MA bank account. Interest paid annually at lower of 5% or actual bank rate. Receipt required within 30 days. Violation: triple damages plus attorney fees.

Reasonable notice required (24 hours typical, 48 hours for repairs). Must arrange with tenant in advance. Entry at reasonable times only.

Late fees must be reasonable. No fee can be charged until rent is 30 days late. Must be specified in lease.

Check whether the cap covers your tenancy

Deposit caps can carry exceptions based on lease length, unit type, landlord size, tenant age, pets, or other facts. Match the rule to your tenancy before concluding that a number is over the limit.

The Seven Searches to Run Before You Sign

Open the lease as searchable text and run these terms in order. This catches both statutory red flags and perfectly legal provisions that can still become expensive.

  1. “Renew,” “notice to vacate,” and “holdover”: Write the notice deadline on your calendar now. Check whether a missed deadline renews the lease, changes it to month-to-month, or increases rent.
  2. “Early termination,” “buyout,” and “liquidated damages”: Add every charge together. A buyout fee, continued rent, concession repayment, and deposit forfeiture are four different costs.
  3. “Deposit,” “cleaning,” and “normal wear”: Identify the return deadline, permitted deductions, itemization procedure, forwarding-address requirement, and any move-out inspection.
  4. “Repair,” “maintenance,” “pest,” and “as is”: Separate tenant-caused damage from structural, appliance, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and health-or-safety responsibilities.
  5. “Utility,” “allocation,” “admin,” and “processing”: Ask for the formula behind every variable fee and whether a no-fee payment method exists.
  6. “Entry,” “inspection,” and “showing”: Compare notice, permitted reasons, hours, and emergency exceptions with the Massachusetts rule above.
  7. “Guest,” “occupant,” “pet,” and “insurance”: Look for approval rules, daily penalties, occupancy triggers, coverage minimums, and addenda that can override the main document.

Disclosures Massachusetts Landlords Must Provide

A disclosure is not filler. It can reveal a hazard, identify the person legally responsible for the property, explain where a deposit is held, or preserve a right you need later. Our database tracks the following 4 for Massachusetts:

  • Lead Paint: Disclosure of known lead-based paint hazards for housing built before 1978 (42 U.S.C. 4852d; Massachusetts Lead Law)
  • Condition Statement: Detailed statement of condition of premises must be provided at move-in (Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15B(2))
  • Security Deposit Receipt: Receipt for security deposit with bank name and account details (Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15B(3))
  • Insurance: Disclosure that tenant may obtain renters insurance (Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 186 Section 15B)

Massachusetts Lease Questions Renters Ask Most

What lease clauses are illegal in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts law restricts 5 clause types tracked in our database, including waiver of implied warranty of habitability; waiver of tenant rights; confession of judgment clause. The exact result depends on the provision’s wording and the law cited for it.
Is my whole Massachusetts lease void if one clause is illegal?
Usually not. An illegal or unenforceable provision can fail without cancelling the rest of the agreement, though the lease’s severability language and the nature of the violation matter.
How much can a landlord charge for a security deposit in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts’s statewide rule is 1 month's rent. Maximum 1 month rent (separate from first/last month rent and key deposit). Must be held in separate interest-bearing MA bank account. Interest paid annually at lower of 5% or actual bank rate. Receipt required within 30 days. Violation: triple damages plus attorney fees.
How long does a landlord have to return a security deposit in Massachusetts?
The general deadline in our Massachusetts record is 30 days. Deductions, itemization, forwarding-address, and notice rules can affect the process. Maximum 1 month rent (separate from first/last month rent and key deposit). Must be held in separate interest-bearing MA bank account. Interest paid annually at lower of 5% or actual bank rate. Receipt required within 30 days. Violation: triple damages plus attorney fees.
How much notice must a landlord give before entering in Massachusetts?
The statewide entry rule is 24 hours typical ("reasonable notice" standard). Emergencies are treated differently, and the lease or a local ordinance may promise more notice. Reasonable notice required (24 hours typical, 48 hours for repairs). Must arrange with tenant in advance. Entry at reasonable times only.
Can a landlord charge any late fee in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts’s statewide late-fee rule is no statutory percentage cap, with 30 days. The fee should also be authorized by the lease. Late fees must be reasonable. No fee can be charged until rent is 30 days late. Must be specified in lease.
Can I break a lease early in Massachusetts?
Possibly, but start with the lease’s early-termination, buyout, replacement-tenant, and notice clauses. State law may provide additional exits for situations such as military orders, domestic violence, serious habitability failures, or other protected circumstances; eligibility and the landlord’s duty to re-rent vary, so verify the current rule before moving out.
Can my Massachusetts lease make me pay for every repair?
Not automatically. Responsibility can turn on who caused the damage, what the lease assigns, and which state or local habitability duties cannot be waived. Put repair requests in writing and separate tenant-caused damage from ordinary wear, building systems, and health-or-safety conditions.

What to Do When a Clause Looks Wrong

  1. Preserve the exact text. Save the lease, every addendum, the listing, payment schedule, and messages. Page numbers and screenshots matter more than a paraphrase.
  2. Name the conflict. Ask the landlord or manager—in writing—how the clause fits the cited Massachusetts rule. Request a corrected copy before signing.
  3. Separate leverage from remedy. Finding bad language may help you negotiate, but it does not by itself authorize withholding rent, changing locks, or ending the lease.
  4. Escalate locally. City and county ordinances can add protections. For an active dispute, contact a Massachusetts tenant organization, legal-aid office, or licensed landlord-tenant attorney.

Check Your Massachusetts Lease

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Research topics were informed by recurring questions in renter forums and national renter surveys. Legal conclusions on this page come from the cited Massachusetts law record. See also the Fannie Mae renter-challenges research and Zillow’s renter trends report.