Alaska
Lease Basics in Alaska
What to understand before you sign, and what your lease can and can't do.
The basics
- A lease is a binding contract; once signed, both sides are generally held to its terms for the lease period.
- Some lease clauses are unenforceable even if you signed them, because state law overrides terms that waive certain tenant protections.
- Rules on rent increases, renewals, and ending a lease early vary widely by state and by whether the lease is fixed-term or month-to-month.
- Always keep a signed copy of the lease and anything the landlord promised in writing.
What to check
- The lease term, rent, due dates, late fees, and who pays which utilities.
- Rules for renewal, rent increases, and ending the lease early (and any penalty).
- Any clause that seems to waive your rights — those may not be enforceable.
- Your state's rules for the lease type you have (fixed-term vs month-to-month).
The specifics — exact deadlines, dollar limits, and procedures — vary in Alaska and change over time. For your situation, ask Lexi or check your state’s official court self-help center or housing/consumer agency.
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