Your lease or rental agreement should spell out your landlord's key rent rules, including:
State laws in Indiana cover several of these rent-related issues, including the amount of notice a landlord must provide to increase rent under a month-to-month tenancy, and how much time a tenant has to pay rent or move before a landlord can file for eviction.
Rent is legally due on the date specified in your lease or rental agreement (usually the first of the month). If you don't pay rent when it is due, the landlord may begin charging you a late fee. Indiana state law does not cover late rent fees. If your lease or rental agreement does not say anything about late fees, your landlord may not impose one, no matter how reasonable it is.
Indiana landlords must give tenants at least 30 days' written notice unless the agreement states otherwise to increase rent or change another term of a month-to-month rental agreement. If you have a long-term lease, however, landlords may not increase the rent until the lease ends and a new tenancy begins—unless the lease itself provides for an increase.
Indiana landlords may not raise the rent in a discriminatory manner—for example, only for members of a certain race.
States set specific rules and procedures for ending a tenancy when a tenant has not paid the rent. Indiana landlords must give tenants at least ten days in which to pay the rent or move. If the tenant does neither, the landlord can file for eviction. For an overview of the subject and useful resources, see the Nolo article Eviction Notices for Nonpayment of Rent in Indiana.
For state rent rules and procedures on issues such as raising rent, see Ind. Code Ann. § § 32-31-1-1 and 32-31-5-4.
For Indiana laws on termination for nonpayment of rent, see Ind. Code Ann. § 32-31-1-6.
See the Laws and Legal Research section of Nolo for advice on finding and reading statutes and court decisions.
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