How much notice is required to raise the rent in Kansas?
Kansas has no statute requiring advance notice of a rent increase — the 30-day figure quoted for month-to-month tenancies is derived from K.S.A. 58-2570(b), which lets either party end a month-to-month tenancy by written notice effective on a rent-paying date at least 30 days after the other side receives it, so a landlord proposing higher rent is effectively offering new terms the tenant can decline by leaving.
Two derivation details matter: the 30 days run from receipt of the notice, not mailing, and the change lands on a periodic rent-paying date. There is no cap on the size or frequency of increases: Kansas has no rent control, and K.S.A. 12-16,120 expressly forbids every city, county and township from adopting any ordinance controlling rent on privately owned residential or commercial property — Kansas cities' constitutional home-rule power does not get around that uniform statute. One guardrail exists: under K.S.A. 58-2572 a landlord may not raise rent in retaliation for a tenant's code complaint, complaint about the landlord's statutory duties, or tenant-union membership, though good-faith increases that pass through documented cost rises (taxes, utilities, acts of God) are protected even then.
Kansas rent increase notice at a glance
| Notice — month-to-month | No rent-increase statute — notice derives from tenancy-termination rules (see summary) |
|---|---|
| Varies by increase size | Not addressed by statute |
| Fixed-term leases | Rent cannot change during a fixed term unless the lease itself provides for it — a contract principle; no section of the Kansas Residential Landlord and Tenant Act addresses mid-term or renewal increases. K.S.A. 58-2570(b) adds that a rental agreement for a definite term of more than 30 days is not construed as month-to-month even if rent is payable at 30-day intervals. |
| Statewide rent control / stabilization | No |
| Rent control details | No statewide rent control exists, and K.S.A. 12-16,120 (enacted 2001, amended 2016) expressly bars every political subdivision — county, municipality or township — from enacting, maintaining or enforcing any ordinance or resolution that would have the effect of controlling the amount of rent charged for privately owned residential or commercial property. Carve-outs: property the political subdivision owns, and voluntary agreements in exchange for local grants or incentives. Subsection (d) also forbids attaching rent-control conditions to building permits, plats, zoning changes, or conditional use permits. |
| Local rent control preempted | Yes |
| Frequency limits | Not addressed by statute |
Notes and caveats
Statute citations
- K.S.A. 58-2570 (b) Official source
- K.S.A. 12-16,120 Official source
- K.S.A. 58-2572 (a), (c) Official source
How this record was verified: Direct read of statute text on the official Kansas Office of Revisor of Statutes site (ksrevisor.gov), each load-bearing section fetched twice by independent methods (WebFetch page read plus raw curl of the same official page, all figures reconciled verbatim): 58-2550 (1-month/1.5-month/half-month pet caps, 14-day and 30-day return clocks, 1.5x penalty), 58-2548 (5-day joint inventory), 58-2557 (reasonable notice/reasonable hours entry), 58-2570 (7-day/30-day/15-day termination notices), 58-2565(b) (30-day absence entry, 10-day abandonment presumption), 58-2564(b) (3-day nonpayment cure), 58-2563 (1.5 months' rent ouster remedy), and 12-16,120 (express local rent-control preemption). Negative checks run against the full Residential Landlord and Tenant Act: all 34 sections (58-2540 through 58-2573) downloaded and searched — no late-fee, grace-period, deposit-interest, escrow/separate-account, or rent-increase-notice provision exists. Pending-bill check 2026-07-11 on kslegislature.gov: 2025-26 biennium adjourned sine die 2026-04-11; HB 2666 (late-fee restrictions), SB 482 (condemned-unit deposit return), and HB 2768 (split rent payments) all died in committee; enacted Sub HB 2357 (eviction expungement) and SB 391 (voucher-mandate preemption) do not affect these four topics.