Tenant Rights — Kentucky
Each section below summarizes a tenant-protective state legal regime applicable in Kentucky. Citations link to the underlying statute or regulation in the corpus where available, or to the official primary source otherwise.
- state Kentucky — viewing
- federal United States
A tenant in Kentucky is simultaneously protected by every layer above. Local rules add enforcement bodies and (where present) higher floors; state law supplies the substantive cause of action; federal law overlays anti-discrimination, accessibility, VAWA, and SCRA protections that may not be waived by lease.
Habitability
What conditions trigger a habitability claim, how to put the landlord on notice, and the remedies available.
- Written Notice To Landlord Required
- Yes
- Cure Period Days
- 14
- Termination Remedy After Uncured Breach
- Yes
- Essential Services Emergency Remedy
- Yes
- Retaliation Protection
- Yes
- Landlord failure to repair after 14 day written notice tenant lease termination plus damages [KRS 383.625]
- Failure to supply essential services rent reduction plus substitute housing costs plus damages [KRS 383.640]
- Retaliation against complaint tenant recover possession plus damages [KRS 383.705]
- Condition described. Habitability claim requires identifying the specific condition.
- Written notice given. KRS 383.625(1) requires written notice to the landlord before tenant remedies attach.
- Cure period elapsed. KRS 383.625(1) gives the landlord 14 days from written notice to cure. Your window has not yet elapsed.
- Urltra jurisdiction. Outside URLTRA-adopting KY jurisdictions, KRS 383.595/.625 do not apply directly.
- Not tenant caused. Tenant-caused conditions do not support a habitability remedy (KRS 383.605).
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Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)
Federal law independently bars a landlord from providing inferior maintenance, repairs, or services on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability.
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Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794; 24 C.F.R. Part 8
Section 504 imposes independent habitability and accessibility duties on any landlord receiving HUD assistance, including Section 8 project-based and public housing.
Applies when is federally assisted housing.
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HUD Housing Quality Standards, 24 C.F.R. § 5.703
HQS is the federal habitability floor for Section 8 voucher and public-housing units regardless of any state law.
Applies when is section 8 voucher or public housing.
Drafter notes
KY URLTRA spine. The 14-day-fix-or-terminate ladder is the substantive remedy; § 383.640 unlocks expedited remedies when essential services (heat, water, hot water, electricity) are interrupted.
Lockout / Illegal Eviction
Self-help eviction is unlawful — the landlord must use court process to recover possession.
- Damages Floor Text
- recovery of possession OR termination of rental agreement; if elected to recover, an amount not more than three months' periodic rent and reasonable attorney's fees; if termination, recovery of all prepaid rent and security deposit
- Attorneys Fees Recoverable
- Yes
- Costs Recoverable
- Yes
- Physical lockout or change of locks restoration of possession plus actual damages plus fees [KRS 383.655]
- Removal of tenant belongings without court order restoration of possession plus actual damages plus fees [KRS 383.655]
- Utility or essential service shutoff actual damages plus fees [KRS 383.500 (URLTA local-adoption gating provision)]
- Lockout type documented. We need a documented act of self-help eviction or essential-service interruption: change of locks, removal of belongings, utility shutoff, or refusal of access without judicial process.
- Jurisdiction has urlta. KRS 383.655 only applies in URLTA-adopting jurisdictions.
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Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3617
Self-help eviction or lock-changing tied to a tenant's protected class or fair-housing activity is independently actionable under federal law.
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VAWA, 34 U.S.C. § 12491
VAWA prohibits eviction (including constructive eviction by lockout) of survivors in HUD-covered housing on the basis of incidents of abuse against them.
Applies when is covered housing and survivor.
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SCRA, 50 U.S.C. § 3953
Active-duty servicemembers may not be evicted from rental housing without a court order during their service.
Applies when is servicemember.
Drafter notes
Verified against KRS 383.655 corpus 2026-04-29. Self-help eviction is unlawful in all 50 states; this ruleset captures the primary statutory remedy for KY.
Retaliation
Protection against landlord retaliation for reporting violations, joining a tenants' union, or asserting your rights.
- Presumption Window Months
- 12
- Damages Floor Text
- actual damages plus reasonable attorney's fees
- Attorneys Fees Recoverable
- Yes
- Costs Recoverable
- Yes
- Increase in rent or decrease in services after protected activity presumption of retaliation plus actual damages costs fees [KRS 383.705(1)(b)]
- Bringing or threatening action for possession after protected activity presumption of retaliation [KRS 383.705(1)(c)]
- Jurisdiction has urlta. KRS 383.705 only applies in jurisdictions that have adopted URLTA (KRS 383.500).
- Protected activity documented. KRS 383.705(1) requires a protected activity — complaining to a government agency, complaining to the landlord about a violation of the warranty of habitability, or organizing or joining a tenants' union.
- Adverse action within year. KRS 383.705 protections operate within a one-year window in Kentucky case law.
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Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3617
§ 3617 independently prohibits coercion, intimidation, threats, or interference with any tenant who has exercised or assisted others in exercising fair-housing rights — including reporting code violations or organizing.
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VAWA, 34 U.S.C. § 12491(b)(3)
VAWA bars retaliatory eviction or rent action against survivors of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking in HUD-covered housing.
Applies when is covered housing and survivor.
Drafter notes
Verified against KRS 383.705 corpus 2026-04-29. Kentucky's URLTA adoption is locality-by-locality (KRS 383.500); outside URLTA jurisdictions this statute does not apply. Common-law retaliation may still be available in non-URLTA localities.
Security Deposit
How quickly the landlord must return the deposit, what they may deduct, and the multiplier on damages if they violate the rule.
- Separate Account Required
- Yes
- Itemization At Move In Required
- Yes
- Itemization At Move Out Required
- Yes
- Forfeiture For Noncompliance
- Yes
- Notice For Unclaimed Deposit Days
- 60
- Failure to use separate bank account forfeiture of right to retain [KRS 383.580(4)]
- Failure to provide initial or final damage listing forfeiture of right to retain [KRS 383.580(4)]
- Tenant fails to claim after landlord notice deposit becomes landlord property [KRS 383.580(7)]
- Tenancy ended. KRS 383.580 governs return after the tenancy ends. Your tenancy is still active.
- Urltra jurisdiction. Outside URLTRA-adopting Kentucky jurisdictions, KRS 383.580 does not apply. A common-law contract claim is required instead.
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Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3604
A landlord may not condition the size, retention, or accounting of a security deposit on a tenant's protected class.
Drafter notes
Verified against KRS 383.580 primary text 2026-04-25 (apps.legislature.ky.gov PDF ingest). KY does not have a fixed-day return-window analogous to MA's 30-day rule; the operative remedy is forfeiture-for-noncompliance with the separate-account + dual-itemization requirements, which is binary rather than time-keyed.