FACTSHEETS
- Housing Rights of Disabled Tenants
From
the Nolo.com Landlords & Tenants Center
If you have a disability, you should understand the laws when you rent a house
or apartment.
Disabled people have some protections when they rent living space. First,
when seeking a rental, landlords are not allowed to ask you whether or not
you have a disability or illness, or ask to see your medical records. After
moving in, your landlord may have to provide you with accommodations, at the
landlord's expense, and your landlord may have to allow you to make reasonable
modifications to your living unit at your own expense.
Who Is Considered Disabled?
The federal Fair Housing Act and Fair Housing Amendments
Act (42 U.S. Code §§ 3601-3619,
3631) prohibit discrimination against people who:
* have a physical or mental disability that substantially limits one or more
major life activities -- including, but not limited to:
* mobility impairments
* hearing impairments
* visual impairments
* chronic alcoholism (if it is being addressed through a recovery program)
* mental illness
* HIV, AIDS and AIDS-Related Complex, or
* mental retardation
* have a history of such a disability, or
* are regarded by others as though they have such a disability.
Discriminatory Questions Not Allowed
Landlords are not allowed to ask you whether or not you have a disability
or illness, or ask to see medical records. Even if it is obvious that you are
disabled -- for example, you use a wheelchair or wear a hearing aid -- it is
nevertheless illegal to inquire how severely you are disabled. In short, your
landlord's actions and questions cannot be designed to treat you differently
than other tenants.
The policy behind this rule is simple: No matter how well-intentioned, the
landlord cannot make decisions about where and how you will live on the property
that he would not make were you not disabled. For example, if there are two
units for rent -- one on the ground floor and one three stories up -- the landlord
must show both units to an applicant who uses a wheelchair, however reasonable
he thinks it would be for the person to consider only the ground floor unit.
Mental or Emotional Impairments
If you had, have, or appear to have mental or emotional impairments, you must
be evaluated by the landlord on the basis of your financial stability and history
as a tenant, not on the basis of your mental health. A landlord may reject
you only if he can point to specific instances of past behavior that would
make you dangerous to others (such as information from a previous landlord
that you repeatedly threatened or assaulted other residents). If you cannot
meet the good-tenant criteria that the landlord applies to all applicants (such
as a minimum rent-to-income ratio), you may be rejected on that basis.
Disabled Tenants' Right to Accommodations by the Landlord
Landlords must accommodate the needs of disabled tenants,
within reason, at the landlord's own expense (42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3)(B)).
As a disabled tenant, you may expect your landlord to reasonably adjust rules,
procedures,
or services in order to give you an equal opportunity to use and enjoy your
dwelling unit or a common space. Accommodations can include such things as
parking: If the landlord provides parking in the first place, providing a close-in,
spacious parking space would be an accommodation for a tenant who uses a wheelchair.
Does your landlord's duty to accommodate disabled tenants
mean that you can expect every rule and procedure to be changed at your request?
No. Although
landlords are expected to accommodate "reasonable" requests, they
need not undertake changes that would seriously impair their ability to run
their business. For example, if an applicant who uses crutches prefers the
third-story apartment in a walk-up building constructed in 1926 to the one
on the ground floor, the landlord does not have to rip the building apart to
install an elevator. That expense would be unreasonable.
Disabled Tenants' Right to Make Modifications
Landlords must allow disabled tenants to make reasonable
modifications to their living unit or common areas at their expense, if needed
for the person
to comfortably and safely live in the unit. (42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3)(A).)
You have the right to modify your living space to the extent necessary to make
the space safe and comfortable, as long as the modifications will not make
the unit unacceptable to the next tenant, or if you agree to undo the modification
when you leave.
Examples of modifications undertaken by a disabled tenant include:
* lowering countertops for a tenant who uses a wheelchair
* installing special faucets or door handles for persons with limited hand
use
* modifying kitchen appliances to accommodate a blind tenant, and
* installing a ramp to allow wheelchair access to a raised living room.
These modifications must be reasonable and made with prior approval. A landlord
is entitled to ask for a description of the proposed modifications, proof that
they will be done in a workman-like manner, and evidence that you are obtaining
any necessary building permits. In addition, if you propose to modify the unit
in a way that will require restoration when you leave (such as the re-positioning
of lowered kitchen counters), the landlord may require you to pay into an interest-bearing
escrow account the amount estimated for the restoration. (The interest will
belong to you.)
Proof of Need for Accommodation or Modification
Landlords are entitled to ask for proof that the accommodation or modification
you have requested will address your needs. For some disabilities -- for example,
installing a ramp to accommodate a wheelchair -- the solutions are obvious.
But other disabilities, especially mental ones, are not obvious, and their
accommodation isn't either -- for example, removing doors to accommodate a
person who is fearful of closed spaces. Without some proof, your landlord has
no way of knowing whether your request is legitimate or a ruse to obtain special
treatment.
If you want a specific accommodation or modification and your disability is
not obvious (or if you anticipate an argument with your landlord regarding
the necessity of what you have proposed), have your proof ready before you
make your request. Ask your physician or therapist for a letter attesting that
you need what are asking for and that it will meet your needs. To protect your
privacy, carefully explain to the physician or other writer that he need not
explain the disability; he need only certify that the changes you would like
are appropriate to your situation.
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