Massachusetts currently has no statewide rent control or caps on increases in 2026, giving landlords flexibility to raise rents at lease renewal or end, subject to notice rules. A controversial ballot initiative for November 2026 seeks to change this by limiting hikes to CPI or 5% max (whichever lower), but it awaits voter approval and exempts small owner-occupied buildings.
Current Rent Increase Rules
Landlords must provide written notice: 30 days for month-to-month tenancies or one full rental period (whichever longer), and terms of the lease dictate for fixed-term agreements. Increases during an active lease require tenant agreement; unilateral hikes breach the contract. No limits exist statewide—market rates prevail, often 5-15% yearly in Boston amid low vacancy (3-4%).
2026 Ballot Initiative Details
Question 25-21 proposes Chapter 40P revival, capping annual increases at CPI (e.g., 3% recently) or 5%, applied to base rent as of January 31, 2026—no vacancy decontrol for new tenants. Exemptions cover owner-occupied 4-unit buildings, new construction (15 years), and subsidized housing. If passed, it activates immediately, overriding local voluntary controls banned since 1994. Polls show 60%+ support, pitting Mayor Wu (pro) against Gov. Healey (anti).
Notice and Timing Essentials
Deliver notices in writing (email OK if consented), specifying new amount and effective date. For May 1 effect, notify by April 1. Tenants rejecting hikes can vacate penalty-free during notice or negotiate; non-payment of old rent risks eviction. Retaliatory increases post-complaints (repairs, organizing) violate tenant protections (MGL c.186 §18).
Prohibited Practices
Hikes cannot discriminate (race, disability, family status) under fair housing laws or punish protected actions. Mid-lease changes need mutual consent; fixed-term ends allow market resets unless renewed. Security deposits cap one month’s rent, returned within 30 days.
Tenant Rights and Recourse
Reject invalid hikes by paying prior rate; sue for triple damages if retaliatory. Join unions like City Life/Vida Urbana for support. If caps pass, base rents lock from Jan 2026—renew now if under market. Resources: masslegalhelp.org, mass.gov/courts.
Landlord Strategies Pre-Ballot
Issue compliant increases by January 31, 2026, to set higher baselines. Document via apps like DoorLoop. Oppose via masslandlords.net campaigns. Market trends: Boston medians $2,800+, up 7% yearly; suburbs lag at 4-6%.
Potential Impacts if Passed
Critics warn supply drops, maintenance lags, as in 1970s controls; supporters cite affordability amid 40% rent-burdened households. No exemptions for turnover hikes curb investor flight. Until voters decide, standard notice rules govern—stay informed via legislature.gov. Tenants: document everything; landlords: act early.
SOURCES:
- https://malegislature.gov/Bills/194/H5008.pdf
- https://www.wbur.org/news/2025/11/20/rent-control-ballot-question-massachusetts-2026-michelle-wu












