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Security Deposit Laws in Louisiana: 30-Day Return Rule, Actual + atty fees Penalty, 2026 Guide

Losing a security deposit to an unresponsive landlord is one of the most common — and most preventable — financial losses renters face. In Louisiana, the law provides specific deadlines and penalties designed to protect tenants. This 2026 guide covers everything: the legal deadline, the penalty for violations, how to document your case, and exactly how to recover your money.

Louisiana Security Deposit — Quick Reference

FeatureLouisiana Law

------------------

Return deadline30 days

Governing statuteLa. R.S. § 9:3251

Bad-faith penaltyactual damages + possible attorney fees for bad faith under § 9:3251

Written contract SOL3 years

Small claims courtCity Court / Justice of the Peace

Small claims limit$5,000

Louisiana vs. Neighboring States

StateDeadlineBad-Faith

----------------------------

Louisiana30 daysActual + atty fees / actual damages + possible attorney fees for bad fa

TX: 30 days, 3× + feesMS: 45 days, actual

AR: 30 days, 2×TN: 30 days, 2× + fees

The 30-Day Return Rule

When the Clock Starts

In Louisiana, the 30-day return clock starts when:

1. The tenancy officially ends (lease expiration or agreed move-out date), AND

2. The tenant vacates the property

Best practice: Send your forwarding address to the landlord in writing (certified mail) on your move-out day — this documents when the clock started.

What the Landlord Must Do

Within 30 days, Louisiana landlords must:

1. Return the security deposit (minus legitimate deductions), AND

2. Provide a written itemized list of any deductions with amounts

Failure to do both within 30 days = violation of La. R.S. § 9:3251.

The Bad-Faith Penalty

actual damages + possible attorney fees for bad faith under § 9:3251 applies when a landlord willfully fails to comply. Willfulness has been found by Louisiana courts when a landlord:

  • Completely ignores the return deadline with no response
  • Provides a false or inflated itemized list
  • Claims deductions for normal wear and tear
  • Provides an itemized list after the deadline

What You Can Recover

DepositWrongfully KeptRecovery

----------------------------------

$800$800$800 actual + costs

$1,200$1,200$1,200 actual + costs

$1,500$1,500$1,500 actual + costs

Without a statutory multiplier, document every dollar of actual and consequential damages.

Normal Wear and Tear — What Landlords Cannot Deduct

Louisiana landlords cannot deduct for:

  • Paint fading, minor scuffs from ordinary living
  • Carpet wear from regular foot traffic
  • Small nail holes from hanging pictures
  • Appliance deterioration from normal age/use
  • Minor fixtures scratches from ordinary kitchen use

Legitimate deductions: Large holes, burns, broken fixtures, pet damage beyond ordinary wear, unpaid rent, excessive cleaning.

How to Get Your Louisiana Security Deposit Back

Step 1: Document Your Move-Out

On move-out day:

  • [ ] Timestamped photos and video of every room (same angles as move-in photos)
  • [ ] One continuous walk-through video
  • [ ] Written key return confirmation from landlord
  • [ ] Send forwarding address to landlord via certified mail that day

Step 2: Track the 30-Day Deadline

Mark the deadline on your calendar. Set a reminder for day 25 to prepare your demand letter.

Step 3: Send a Certified Mail Demand Letter (Day 31)

If no deposit return by the deadline:

1. Write a demand letter citing La. R.S. § 9:3251

2. State the exact amount owed and the applicable penalty

3. Give 14 days to respond

4. Send by certified mail, return receipt requested

→ Generate your Louisiana security deposit demand letter now

Demand letters resolve 30–40% of Louisiana deposit disputes before court.

Step 4: File in City Court / Justice of the Peace (If No Response)

1. File a complaint at City Court / Justice of the Peace for claims up to $5,000

2. Pay the filing fee (recoverable if you win)

3. The court serves the defendant

4. Attend the hearing with organized evidence

5. Present your case: lease, photos, demand letter, timeline

Step 5: Collect Your Judgment

After winning, enforce through:

  • Wage garnishment (up to 25% disposable earnings)
  • Bank account levy (Writ of Execution)
  • Property lien (recorded with county recorder)
  • Debtor's Examination (compels asset disclosure under oath)

Evidence Checklist

  • [ ] Lease agreement showing deposit amount
  • [ ] Bank statement showing deposit payment
  • [ ] Move-in checklist (or proof none was provided)
  • [ ] Move-in and move-out photos (timestamped)
  • [ ] Written forwarding address notification + certified mail receipt
  • [ ] Calendar showing 30-day deadline calculation
  • [ ] Landlord communications about the deposit
  • [ ] Copy of demand letter + USPS tracking + signed green card

Louisiana Courts — Practical Notes

New Orleans (Orleans Parish) and Baton Rouge (East Baton Rouge Parish) handle the highest volumes. LSU's rental market and New Orleans' tourism rental market create significant deposit disputes. Louisiana's civil law system uses 'prescription' instead of statutes of limitations.

Common Landlord Tactics — How to Counter Them

"I mailed the deposit but it got lost." → Ask for USPS tracking. No tracking = no proof.

"The deadline is longer than 30 days." → Cite La. R.S. § 9:3251 — the deadline is unambiguous.

"You damaged the carpet/walls." → Counter with move-in checklist + comparison photos proving pre-existing condition.

"The cleaning cost $[inflated amount]." → Demand receipts. Inflated estimates without documentation are frequently rejected.

"I deducted for normal wear and tear." → Cite the statute; show photos. Normal wear is legally non-deductible.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the security deposit return deadline in Louisiana?

A: 30 days under La. R.S. § 9:3251.

Q: What is the penalty for a Louisiana landlord who misses the deadline?

A: actual damages + possible attorney fees for bad faith under § 9:3251.

Q: Can a Louisiana landlord deduct for normal wear and tear?

A: No — normal wear and tear is a cost of being a landlord, not a deduction from the security deposit.

Q: How long do I have to sue?

A: 3 years from the violation under Louisiana's statute of limitations.

Q: What if my landlord sends an itemized list after the 30-day deadline?

A: Under La. R.S. § 9:3251, the right to make deductions may be forfeited if the itemized list is not provided within the deadline. Courts vary on this — include it in your demand letter.

Q: Can I claim more than just the deposit?

A: Yes — the applicable penalty (actual damages + possible attorney fees for bad faith under § 9:3251) may allow recovery above the deposit amount, plus filing fees and court costs.

Bottom Line

Louisiana's security deposit law under La. R.S. § 9:3251 provides real enforcement tools. A certified mail demand letter is the most cost-effective first step — it takes 15 minutes, costs under $10, and resolves most disputes before court.

Generate your Louisiana security deposit demand letter now

Related Guides

Last updated: June 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Move-Out Checklist for Louisiana Tenants

To maximize your chances of getting your full deposit back:

Before moving out:

  • [ ] Give proper written notice (check lease for required notice period, typically 30–60 days)
  • [ ] Request a move-out inspection with the landlord present
  • [ ] Document every room with date-stamped video before returning keys
  • [ ] Clean thoroughly — beyond normal cleaning
  • [ ] Repair any damage you caused (nail holes, pet damage, stains)
  • [ ] Return ALL keys, fobs, parking passes, and remotes

At move-out:

  • [ ] Take photos/video of every room, appliance, and fixture
  • [ ] Get a written move-out inspection report signed by landlord if possible
  • [ ] Send your forwarding address in writing on the move-out day
  • [ ] Keep proof of your final rent payment being current

After moving out:

  • [ ] Keep copies of all move-in photos, lease, and communications
  • [ ] Mark your calendar for the 30 days (1 month for no-deduction return) deadline
  • [ ] If no deposit/accounting by deadline: send demand letter immediately

Common Wrongful Deductions in Louisiana

Louisiana landlords frequently try to make these deductions — which are often improper:

Improper DeductionWhy It's Wrong

----------------------------------

"Professional cleaning" for a clean unitNormal move-out cleaning is not chargeable if unit was clean

Carpet replacement for a carpet over 5–7 years oldCarpets are fully depreciated; replacement is landlord's cost

Paint for a unit occupied 2+ yearsNormal repainting is landlord's maintenance obligation

Small nail holesNormal wear and tear from hanging pictures

Faded flooring from sunlightNormal wear and tear

Appliance wear from normal useLandlord's maintenance, not tenant damage

The key standard: Landlords can deduct for damage beyond normal wear and tear. They cannot charge you for the normal aging and use of the property.

Writing Your Louisiana Deposit Demand Letter

If your landlord misses the 30 days (1 month for no-deduction return) deadline or makes improper deductions, send a demand letter by certified mail:

Key elements:

1. Your name, former rental address, and move-out date

2. The deposit amount paid

3. The date the 30 days (1 month for no-deduction return) deadline passed

4. Your legal basis: La. R.S. 9:3251

5. Your demand: return of deposit + Deposit amount + attorney fees for wrongful withholding

6. Your deadline to respond (14 days)

7. Consequences if they don't respond (small claims, state AG)

Generate your Louisiana security deposit demand letter

Louisiana Small Claims Court: Filing for Your Deposit

If your demand letter goes unanswered, file in Louisiana City/Parish Court Small Claims — no lawyer needed:

Filing steps:

1. Locate the court serving your county (Google: "Louisiana small claims court [county]")

2. Complete the plaintiff's claim form

3. Pay the filing fee ($30–$100 typically)

4. Have the defendant (landlord) served

5. Attend your hearing with all evidence

What to bring:

  • Original lease (showing deposit amount)
  • Proof of payment (bank statement, cancelled check, money order receipt)
  • Move-out documentation (photos, inspection reports)
  • Your certified demand letter + signed green card
  • Evidence of the 30 days (1 month for no-deduction return) deadline being missed or improper deductions

Small claims limit in Louisiana: $5,000 — sufficient for most deposit disputes.

Louisiana-Specific Context

Louisiana requires itemized statement of deductions; failure means full deposit forfeiture.

Related Guides

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