Washington Rent Increase Laws 2026: What Tenants Should Know

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Washington’s rent increase laws for 2026 cap hikes at 9.683% for most residential tenants under HB 1217, effective statewide since May 2025. Landlords must provide 90 days’ written notice, with local rules like Seattle’s 180-day requirement potentially stricter. Tenants gain protections against excessive raises, but exemptions apply to newer buildings and nonprofits.

2026 Rent Cap Details

The cap equals 7% plus Seattle-area CPI (2.683% for 2026), not exceeding 10%—published annually by Commerce on June 1. Applies after a tenant’s first 12 months; no increases allowed sooner. For 2025 (through Dec. 31), the limit was 10%; notices served now trigger the 2026 rate if effective post-January 1.

Notice Requirements

Mandatory 90-day advance written notice for any raise, delivered clearly with new amount and date—no 60-day option remains. Seattle demands 180 days for increases over 10% under local ordinance, overriding state minimums. Incentives limited; long-term leases can’t exceed 5% discount without cap compliance.

Exempt Properties

  • Buildings constructed after 2018 (15-year exemption window).
  • Nonprofits, public housing, dorms, and owner-occupied single-family homes (with disclosure).
  • Hospitals, nursing homes, and transient lodging.​

Local rent stabilization (e.g., Seattle, Tacoma pilots) may add layers but can’t exceed state caps.​

Tenant Rights

No retaliation for disputes; Attorney General enforces via fines up to $5,000 per violation. Tenants can terminate early if raises violate caps, with 30 days’ notice. Fees/deposits also capped indirectly through fair practices. Check Commerce’s Landlord Resource Center for CPI updates and forms.

Key Comparison: Caps by Year

YearMax IncreaseNotice Period
YearMax IncreaseNotice Period
202510%90 days
20269.683%90 days min.
2027 TBD7% + CPI (≤10%)90 days min.

Action Steps

Review lease for effective dates; document notices. Use state resources at commerce.wa.gov for verification. Contact tenant unions or legal aid if over-limit—triple damages possible for willful violations. Local variations demand city-specific checks, especially in King County.

SOURCES :

  1. https://www.warealtor.org/about-us/contact-us/news-media/blogdetails/articles/2025/07/31/washington-law-imposes-rent-caps-effective-immediately
  2. https://propertymanagersseattle.com/washington-rental-law-compliance-guide/

Maria

Maria is a professional content writer at MyHometownPost.com, specializing in Oklahoma local news, U.S. laws and policy updates, and global current events. With a keen eye for detail and commitment to accuracy, she delivers timely, engaging, and informative stories that keep readers well-informed about important developments locally and worldwide.

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