Habitability Repair Cost Withholding Calculator
Estimate how much rent a tenant may legally withhold or use for repairs based on the cost of fixing a habitability defect and the severity of the condition. This uses the repair-and-deduct and rent withholding frameworks common across U.S. jurisdictions.
Formulas Used
Repair-and-Deduct Cap:
Cap = Cap Multiplier × Monthly Rent
Allowable Repair Deduction:
Allowable Deduction = min(Repair Cost, Cap)
Rent Owed After Repair Deduction:
Rent Owed = Monthly Rent − Allowable Deduction
Monthly Rent Reduction (Withholding):
Monthly Reduction = Severity Rate × Monthly Rent
Reduced Rent Owed Per Month:
Reduced Rent = Monthly Rent − Monthly Reduction
Total Withheld Over Unrepaired Period:
Total Withheld = Monthly Reduction × Months Unrepaired
Assumptions & References
- The repair-and-deduct remedy allows tenants to hire a repair person and deduct the cost from rent, subject to a statutory cap (commonly 1× monthly rent). See, e.g., California Civil Code § 1942; similar statutes exist in most U.S. states.
- Rent withholding (or rent reduction) is based on the diminished value of the unit due to the habitability defect. Courts and arbitrators typically apply a percentage reduction proportional to severity.
- Severity percentages (25%–100%) are derived from common judicial and arbitration outcomes in habitability cases and the Restatement (Second) of Property § 11.1.
- The statutory cap multiplier defaults to 1× monthly rent (California standard) but varies by jurisdiction — always verify local law.
- Tenants must typically provide written notice to the landlord and allow a reasonable repair period (often 30 days) before exercising either remedy.
- This calculator does not account for rent escrow requirements, court-ordered reductions, or jurisdiction-specific procedural rules.
- Results are estimates only and do not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney or local housing authority.