Ohio security deposit law
Plain-English summary, citations, and what to do if your landlord violates it. Last updated 2026-04-26.
| Deposit cap | No statutory cap. |
| Return deadline | 30 days from move-out |
| Itemization required | YES — Itemized list of deductions + remaining deposit within 30 days of termination + delivery of possession + tenant's forwarding address. |
| Wear-and-tear excluded | YES |
| Double damages available | YES |
| Statute | Ohio Revised Code §5321.16 |
| Small claims cap | $6,000 |
| Notes | Deposits over $50 OR over 1 month's rent earn 5% annual interest if tenant occupies for 6+ months. |
If the landlord violated the law
If your landlord didn't return your deposit within 30 days or didn't itemize deductions, you can demand the deposit back — and in Ohio, recover up to 2× the deposit in damages.
The exact rule: Wrongful retention: tenant entitled to 2× the wrongfully-withheld portion + reasonable attorney fees.
A free letter generator for Ohio is on the roadmap. See the NY generator for the format — the legal logic adapts to Ohio per the statute below.
What to do step by step
- Send a written demand letter, certified mail with return receipt, to the landlord's address on file. State the deposit amount, the move-out date, the days elapsed, and the statute (Ohio Revised Code §5321.16).
- Wait 14-30 days for compliance.
- If still no return: file in your local small claims court (cap in Ohio: $6,000). Filing fees are typically $20-$60.
- Bring: the lease, deposit-paid proof, photos taken at move-out, any communication with the landlord, and a copy of your demand letter (with the certified-mail receipt).
Common landlord excuses (and why they don't hold)
- "It's wear and tear": In Ohio, ordinary wear and tear is NOT a deductible item. Period.
- "I haven't gotten around to it": The deadline is statutory. 30 days, no extensions.
- "I'm holding it for damage I haven't quantified yet": The law requires an itemized statement. Vague claims = unenforceable retention.
- "You broke the lease": Lease-break damages are a separate claim — they don't entitle the landlord to skip the deposit-return process.
Why this page exists
Most landlord-tenant info pages are written by law firms hoping to upsell representation. This isn't that. It's a public-interest summary based on the actual statute, free to use, no signup. If you find an error, open an issue on GitHub.