How much notice is required to raise the rent in North Carolina?
North Carolina has no statute directly regulating rent increases or requiring rent-increase notice; the practical floor is G.S. 42-14's termination notice, which for a month-to-month tenancy is just seven days — among the shortest in the country — so a landlord can effectively impose a new rent on seven days' notice by making it the price of continuing the tenancy.
Week-to-week tenancies get two days, year-to-year tenancies one month, and manufactured-home lot tenancies a special 60 days. There is no cap on the size or frequency of increases, no statewide rent control, and G.S. 42-14.1 forbids any city or county from regulating rents on privately owned residential or commercial property.
North Carolina 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 | No statute addresses increases during or at renewal of a fixed term; the lease controls mid-term, and at expiration the landlord may propose any new rent. A year-to-year tenancy requires one month's notice to quit before the end of the tenancy year (G.S. 42-14). |
| Statewide rent control / stabilization | No |
| Rent control details | Not addressed by statute |
| Local rent control preempted | Yes |
| Frequency limits | Not addressed by statute |
Notes and caveats
Statute citations
- G.S. 42-14 Official source
- G.S. 42-14.1 Official source
How this record was verified: Direct read of statute text on the official North Carolina General Assembly site (ncleg.gov / ncleg.net): Tenant Security Deposit Act Article 6 (G.S. 42-50 through 42-56) full article text, G.S. 42-46 (full current text including the SL 2025-52 rewrite of subsection (i)), G.S. 42-14, and G.S. 42-14.1 (operative sentence confirmed in the official Article 1 text). H990 (2025) status verified via LegiScan against the ncleg bill record.