Know Your Rights
Renting in Bengaluru doesn't have to be stressful. Know what to look for, what to demand, and what to avoid — backed by the law.
Your Rights as a Tenant
Karnataka law protects tenants. Here are the rights every tenant in Bengaluru should know.
Fair Rent
Landlords cannot charge arbitrary rent increases. Under the 2026 Karnataka Rent Act, rent increases require 90 days' written notice and must be specified in your agreement — typically 5-10% annually.
Security Deposit Cap
The maximum deposit a landlord can demand is 2 months' rent. This is law, not a suggestion. If asked for more, you can refuse and cite the Karnataka Rent Act.
Right to Privacy
Your landlord must give at least 24 hours' written notice before entering your home. Only in genuine emergencies (fire, flood) can they enter without notice.
Dispute Resolution
The Rent Tribunal handles disputes within 60 days. You don't need an expensive lawyer. File complaints about excess deposit, illegal eviction, or harassment directly.
Finding Your Perfect Home
A step-by-step approach to house hunting in Bengaluru — without getting scammed.
Set Your Budget
Calculate what you can afford — rent should be 25-30% of your take-home pay. Include maintenance, utilities, and commute costs.
- Don't forget brokerage (usually 1 month rent) and moving costs
- Budget for 2 months' deposit + first month's rent upfront
- Factor in society maintenance charges (₹1,000-5,000/month)
Search Strategically
Use multiple platforms, visit at different times of day, and always check commute time from your workplace — not just distance.
- Check water supply: ask current tenants, not the broker
- Visit during evening to check parking and noise levels
- Verify Metro/bus connectivity for your daily commute
Inspect Thoroughly
Don't rush through a property visit. Use the inspection checklist below. Take photos and videos of everything — especially existing damage.
- Turn on every tap — check pressure and hot water
- Flip every switch — test fans, lights, and outlets
- Check mobile signal strength in every room
Sign a Registered Agreement
Insist on a written, registered rental agreement on Kaveri 2.0. Read every clause. Never accept a verbal agreement — no matter how friendly the landlord seems.
- Verify the deposit amount matches what you agreed (max 2 months)
- Check the notice period clause — both ways
- Ensure rent payment method is specified (UPI preferred)
Move In with Documentation
Before moving in, create a condition report with photos. Document every scratch, stain, and broken item. Both you and the landlord should sign it.
- Date-stamped photos of every room
- Written inventory of all fixtures and appliances
- Both parties sign the condition report
Home Inspection Checklist
Print this or save it on your phone. Check every item before you sign anything.
Know Your Legal Rights
The law is on your side. Here's what protects you as a tenant in Karnataka.
2-Month Deposit Cap
No landlord can demand more than 2 months' rent as deposit. If they try, cite the Karnataka Rent Act. You can recover excess with 9% interest through the Rent Tribunal.
Registered Agreement Required
Your landlord must register the rental agreement on Kaveri 2.0 within 60 days of signing. You'll get a Unique Tenancy ID — essential for any dispute. An unregistered agreement cannot be used to evict you or enforce unfair terms.
No Arbitrary Eviction
A landlord cannot evict you without a Rent Tribunal order. They must prove valid grounds — non-payment, damage, or personal use — and follow proper legal process.
Rent Receipts Are Your Right
You're entitled to a rent receipt for every payment. This is essential for HRA tax exemptions. Manay generates these automatically for every UPI payment.
Property Care Visits
Third-party property care visits protect your deposit — up to quarterly for Gold Karma. They catch issues early, handle minor repairs, and document the home's condition throughout your tenancy. No more "you damaged this" disputes when you move out.
Maintenance: Who Pays for What
The law splits it clearly: your landlord handles structural repairs, painting, and major plumbing/electrical. You handle day-to-day upkeep — lightbulbs, basic cleaning, minor fixes. If your landlord ignores a structural repair for 30 days, you can fix it and deduct from rent.
Tenancy Inheritance
If a tenant passes away, tenancy rights transfer to legal heirs (spouse, children). The agreement doesn't die with you — your family's home stays protected under specific conditions.
Never pay rent in cash without a receipt. UPI payments are instant proof. If your landlord insists on cash, insist on a signed receipt. Under the 2026 Karnataka Rent Act, rent receipts are mandatory and can be demanded at any time. Read the full law guide →
Red Flags to Watch For
See any of these? Think twice before signing.
Deposit More Than 2 Months
A landlord asking for 6+ months deposit is either unaware of the law or ignoring it. Both are bad signs. This is your strongest legal protection — use it.
No Written Agreement
"We don't need a contract, trust me" — this is the biggest red flag in renting. Without a registered agreement, you have zero legal protection. Walk away.
Cash-Only Payments
Insisting on cash rent with no receipt is a way to avoid taxes — and a way to later claim you never paid. Always prefer UPI or bank transfer.
Restrictive Rules
"No guests after 9pm", "No non-veg cooking", "No visitors" — these are not legal clauses. A landlord cannot impose lifestyle restrictions beyond what's in the registered agreement.
Pressure to Sign Immediately
"There are 5 other people interested" — high-pressure tactics mean the property has issues they want you to overlook. Take your time. A good deal will still be there tomorrow.
Won't Show You the Actual Unit
If they show you a "model flat" or "similar flat" but not the one you'll actually live in, something is wrong. Always insist on seeing the exact unit before signing.
Rent Smarter with Manay
Digital agreements, UPI rent receipts for HRA, deposit protection, and full legal compliance — all in one app.
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