Just cause · rent caps · retaliation · habitability · entry · source of income — under Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act)
Alaska tenant protections are governed primarily by Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) — the Alaska Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (or its equivalent title in the Alaska Code) — together with the federal Fair Housing Act, the federal Americans with Disabilities Act, applicable HUD regulations, and overlay ordinances in Alaska cities and counties. Every Alaska landlord — whether managing a single-family rental, a small multifamily building, or a large apartment portfolio — operates under this framework, and violations expose the landlord to actual damages, statutory penalties, attorney fees, and in some cases loss of the right to evict.
The Alaska tenant-protection landscape in one view: no statewide just-cause requirement — a Alaska landlord may end a month-to-month tenancy with proper written notice, though local ordinances may impose just-cause; no statewide rent cap (localities free to enact their own); source of income is not protected at the state level; 24 hours' written notice required before non-emergency entry; implied warranty of habitability applies to every residential tenancy (heat, hot water, structural integrity, freedom from vermin, working plumbing and electrical, compliance with local housing codes); retaliation is prohibited within a statutory window after any tenant exercise of a protected right (code complaint, fair-housing complaint, tenant organizing, rent withholding for habitability, joining a tenants' union); and security-deposit rules (maximum, interest, itemized return, timeline) are codified in Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) with statutory penalties for landlord non-compliance.
This Alaska tenant-protections guide walks through each major right a Alaska tenant holds and each corresponding obligation a Alaska landlord owes — fair housing and protected classes, source-of-income protections, reasonable accommodations and modifications for disabled tenants, entry-notice rules, habitability and repair obligations, retaliation, lease-renewal and termination requirements, security deposits, rent-increase notice, lockout and self-help prohibitions, source-of-income, and lead-paint disclosures for pre-1978 housing. Every rule is cited to Alaska statute or federal regulation so landlords and tenants alike can verify the law before acting.
| Just cause required for eviction | No | — |
| Rent increase cap | None statewide | — |
| Retaliation protection | Prohibited | Alaska Stat. § 34.03.310 |
| Warranty of habitability | Required | Alaska Stat. § 34.03.100 |
| Notice required before entry | 24 hours (written) | Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) |
| Source-of-income protection | No (state level) | Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) |
Federal, state, and local fair-housing protections in Alaska. Alaska landlords are prohibited from discriminating based on the seven federal Fair Housing Act protected classes (race, color, religion, sex including sexual orientation and gender identity under the 2021 HUD memorandum, national origin, familial status, and disability); any additional classes protected by Alaska state law or local Alaska municipal ordinance (commonly: sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, age, ancestry, creed, military or veteran status, domestic-violence survivor status, lawful occupation, and citizenship or immigration status). Every screening decision, every lease decision, every eviction decision in Alaska must be based on written, applied-uniformly criteria with documented reasoning, and any denial that relies in whole or part on a consumer report must be accompanied by a federal FCRA adverse-action notice identifying the reporting agency and explaining the applicant's right to dispute.
Entry notice in Alaska: 24 hours required. Alaska statute requires the landlord to give the tenant at least 24 hours of advance written notice before any non-emergency entry into the rental unit — for inspections, showings to prospective tenants or buyers, routine maintenance, contractor work, or any other non-emergency purpose. The notice must identify the date, approximate time window, and purpose of the entry. Emergency entry (active fire, burst pipe or water intrusion, gas leak, credible threat to health and safety, suspected crime in progress) is permitted in Alaska without advance notice, but the landlord must document the emergency contemporaneously (photos, incident report, witness statements) and notify the tenant in writing of the entry as soon as practicable after the emergency is resolved.
Implied warranty of habitability in Alaska. Every Alaska residential tenancy carries an implied warranty of habitability — codified in Alaska Stat. § 34.03.100 or equivalent — requiring the landlord to maintain the rental in a condition fit for human habitation. Core habitability obligations include: functional heating to the statutory minimum temperature, hot and cold running water, working plumbing, working electrical service to code, weather-tight roof and windows, structural integrity of floors walls and ceilings, freedom from rodent and vermin infestation, working smoke and carbon-monoxide detectors, trash removal, and compliance with applicable state and local housing codes. When a Alaska tenant gives the landlord written notice of a habitability defect and the landlord fails to make repairs within a reasonable time (typically 14–30 days, sooner for emergencies), the tenant may have statutory remedies — rent withholding into escrow, repair-and-deduct, lease termination, or a habitability defense in any later eviction action.
Anti-retaliation in Alaska. Alaska law prohibits a landlord from retaliating against a tenant who has exercised a legally protected right — making a good-faith habitability or code-enforcement complaint, contacting a fair-housing agency, organizing or joining a tenants' union, withholding rent lawfully under a repair-and-deduct or escrow statute, or asserting any other tenant right under Alaska or federal law. Any rent increase, reduction of services, lease non-renewal, eviction filing, or other materially adverse action within the statutory retaliation window (typically 6 months, sometimes longer depending on Alaska statute and case law) is presumed retaliatory, and the landlord carries the burden of rebutting the presumption with a documented, non-retaliatory legitimate business reason that was contemplated before the tenant's protected activity. Document every legitimate business reason — contemporaneous memos, repair-cost estimates, market-rate rent comparables, tenant ledgers, prior warning letters — before acting, not after.
Just-cause in Alaska. Alaska does not impose statewide just-cause on residential non-renewal — a Alaska landlord may end a month-to-month tenancy with proper written notice. But a substantial and growing number of Alaska cities and counties have imposed just-cause termination at the local level, and where the local ordinance is stricter than state law, the local ordinance controls. Before relying on the more permissive state rule, verify the current municipal code in the Alaska city or county where the rental property is located — many Alaska landlords have been caught out by recently enacted city-level just-cause rules they did not know about.
Source of income at the state level in Alaska. Alaska state law does not list source of income as a protected fair-housing class, so a Alaska landlord may, as a matter of state law, decline to participate in the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program or refuse vouchers. But a growing number of Alaska cities and counties do protect source of income at the local level — verify the municipal code in the Alaska jurisdiction where the property is located before refusing a voucher holder, and remember that federal protections (disability, familial status, national origin) still protect voucher holders who fall within those classes regardless of Alaska state law.
Security deposits in Alaska. Alaska caps the maximum security deposit a landlord may collect, specifies what the landlord may deduct (unpaid rent, reasonable cleaning beyond ordinary wear-and-tear, repair of damage beyond ordinary wear-and-tear), and imposes a statutory deadline to return the deposit with an itemized accounting after move-out (commonly 14–45 days depending on Alaska statute). Late or inadequate return of the deposit typically triggers statutory penalties — double or treble damages plus attorney fees in most Alaska jurisdictions — so Alaska landlords should calendar the statutory return deadline the day the tenant surrenders the keys.
No. Alaska does not impose a statewide just-cause requirement; landlords may end a month-to-month tenancy with proper notice.
Alaska requires 24 hours' written notice before non-emergency entry.
Retaliation is barred under Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) when the tenant has exercised a legal right — reporting code violations, organizing, or contacting housing authorities.
Alaska landlords must maintain units in habitable condition — functional plumbing, heat, electrical service, structural integrity, and compliance with applicable housing codes. Tenants who give proper notice and are ignored may withhold rent, repair-and-deduct, or break the lease depending on local statute.
A sudden rent increase or lease non-renewal within 6 months after a tenant complaint is presumed retaliatory in most jurisdictions. Landlords carry the burden of rebutting the presumption. Document your legitimate business reason before acting.
Sources: Alaska Stat. § 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act); individual statutes as cited. Last reviewed April 17, 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a licensed Alaska attorney.