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Maryland Security Deposit Laws: The 45-Day Return Rule

By Jennifer Torres

Maryland requires landlords to hold deposits in federally insured institutions and pay 1.5% annual interest. Combined with a 45-day return deadline and triple-damages penalties, Maryland provides strong tenant protections. Here’s what the law requires.

The Short Answer

Security Deposit Cap

Maryland allows landlords to collect up to 2 months’ rent as a security deposit. Once collected, the deposit must be held according to strict rules. The landlord cannot use the deposit as operating capital or mix it with personal funds.

The 45-Day Return Deadline

Maryland requires landlords to return your security deposit within 45 days after lease termination. This longer timeline gives landlords more time to assess damages but ensures tenants eventually receive their funds. The landlord must provide a written itemization of any deductions along with the returned balance.

If the landlord fails to return the deposit or provide an itemization within 45 days, the tenant has grounds for legal action.

What Can a Maryland Landlord Legally Deduct?

A landlord can deduct for:

The landlord must provide a written itemization explaining each deduction, the reason for it, and the cost. Unsupported or lump-sum deductions without explanation are not permitted.

What Is Normal Wear and Tear in Maryland?

Maryland courts apply a practical “reasonable tenant” standard. Normal wear and tear is the expected deterioration from ordinary use. Landlords cannot charge tenants for normal aging; tenants are responsible for damage they caused.

Landlords cannot deduct for:

Landlords can deduct for:

Penalties for Wrongful Withholding

Maryland provides strong remedies for wrongful deposit withholding. If a landlord improperly withholds your security deposit, you can recover:

This triple-damages provision creates powerful leverage against landlords who violate the law. Even a single violation can result in substantial penalties.

How to Get Your Deposit Back in Maryland

  1. Request proof of account. Ask your landlord to verify that the deposit is held in a federally insured institution. The landlord must disclose this information upon request.
  2. Take detailed photos and video. Document the unit’s condition on move-in and move-out days. Include all rooms, appliances, and fixtures. Use time-stamped media.
  3. Provide a forwarding address. When you move, give your landlord a written forwarding address for the return of the deposit.
  4. Wait for return or itemization. The landlord has 45 days from lease termination to return your deposit or provide a written itemized statement of deductions.
  5. Check for interest. Verify that any returned deposit includes 1.5% annual interest (or the greater rate if the account earned more). For deposits held less than one year, calculate interest proportionally.
  6. Review deductions carefully. Compare each deduction to your move-out photos and the lease. Are the costs reasonable and properly documented?
  7. Send a demand letter. If the landlord wrongfully withheld funds, failed to pay interest, or failed to itemize, send a formal written demand for return within 10 days.
  8. Document all correspondence. Keep copies of every letter, email, or text about the deposit.
  9. File in small claims court or circuit court. If the landlord doesn’t respond, file a claim for up to 3x the wrongfully withheld amount, plus unpaid interest and attorney’s fees.
  10. Gather evidence. Bring photos, the lease, the landlord’s itemization (if any), bank statements showing interest, and all written correspondence.

Real Situations in Maryland

Maryland’s 1.5% annual interest requirement catches many landlords off guard. A tenant in Baltimore paid a $1,500 security deposit and held the lease for 18 months. Upon move-out, the landlord returned $1,500 with no interest. The tenant calculated that 1.5% annual interest on $1,500 for 18 months equals approximately $34 in owed interest. The tenant sued for the $34 interest owed plus triple damages ($102) plus attorney’s fees. The small amount of interest made the recovery seem modest, but combined with the triple-damages penalty, the total exceeded $200. This demonstrates how Maryland’s interest requirement is a technical but real protection that many landlords ignore.

The second common Maryland situation involves the interaction of the 45-day deadline with the interest requirement. A landlord in Rockville held a deposit for two years while a tenant lived in the rental. Upon move-out, the landlord returned the deposit 50 days later (past the 45-day deadline) with no interest. The tenant sued and won: triple damages on the wrongfully withheld amount (because the deadline was missed), plus the full two years of owed interest (1.5% × 2), plus attorney’s fees. The combination of the deadline violation and the missing interest created a substantial recovery.

The third frequent Maryland dispute involves the federal insured institution requirement. A landlord claimed to hold the deposit in “a safe account” but never disclosed the bank name or account number. Maryland law requires landlords to hold deposits in federally insured institutions and disclose this information upon request. When the tenant asked for proof, the landlord couldn’t provide it. The tenant sued and won triple damages because the landlord failed to comply with the account requirement itself—a violation separate from any deduction dispute.

Common Mistakes Maryland Tenants Make

Not requesting the account information at lease signing. Maryland law requires landlords to disclose the federally insured institution where your deposit is held. Ask for this information in writing at move-in. If the landlord refuses or is vague, document this. The failure to disclose is itself a violation that can support a triple-damages claim.

Not calculating the interest owed. When you receive your deposit back, verify that interest is included. For deposits held less than one year, calculate it proportionally (1.5% × [months held / 12 months]). If the returned amount doesn’t include interest, demand it in writing and file a claim if not paid. Even small interest amounts, when triple-damaged, become significant recovery.

Not sending a demand letter before filing in court. Send a formal certified letter requesting return of the wrongfully withheld amount, the owed interest, and attorney’s fees within 10 days. This formal notice strengthens your small claims or circuit court case and demonstrates that you gave the landlord a chance to cure the violation.

Key Statute

Md. Code, Real Prop. § 8-203 through § 8-212 – Maryland Security Deposit Law

View the statute at https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/Laws/StatuteText?article=grp&section=8-203&enactments=false

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always verify current rules at the source linked above or consult a licensed Maryland attorney. Last reviewed: March 2026.


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