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Are you a landlord? Work for a property management company? Or in the rental sector? Here’s a $48 million reminder to obey the law: the FTC’s settlement with Invitation Homes for adding junk fees, steering residents away from eviction protections, making false promises of 24/7 emergency maintenance, and refusing to return security deposits.

With more than 80,000 homes across 16 geographical markets, Invitation Homes is one of the largest single-family home landlords in the country. According to the FTC’s complaint, the corporate landlord engaged in a vast advertising campaign that touted tenant-friendly procedures, remodeled homes, and an overall “worry-free leasing lifestyle.” Invitation Homes’ website and rental listings promised consumers inspected homes, “24/7 emergency maintenance,” and that residents’ security deposits would be deducted only for damage they caused beyond normal wear and tear.

But the reality was starkly different. The FTC says Invitation Homes hid junk fees in its rental listings, making the actual monthly lease payments higher than the advertised price. On move-in day, many of the homes were in disrepair, in need of obvious maintenance work, or had major habitability issues — like raw sewage backup and flooding.

According to the FTC, move-out day wasn’t much better. The FTC claims Invitation Homes unfairly withheld security deposits for charges that residents didn’t owe, including for normal wear and tear and damage that existed before residents moved in. And during the pandemic, the FTC says the company steered residents away from obtaining government protections from evictions, including under the CDC’s eviction moratorium.

In addition to requiring Invitation Homes to pay $48 million, the settlement order prohibits the company from using junk fees and deceptive rental prices. For example, Invitation Homes must advertise the total monthly rent inclusive of all mandatory fees and use fair security deposit practices. The order also prohibits the company from making false promises about the condition of homes or emergency maintenance service; and prevents unfair evictions of residents.

You’ll want to read the detailed allegations of the complaint to see how your company’s practices stack up against Invitation Homes’ — but here are some key takeaways that bear repeating:

  • Advertised rental prices should include mandatory fees. Housing costs make up a significant portion of a person’s monthly budget. Make it easy for consumers to budget (and comparison shop) by including all mandatory monthly fees in the advertised rental price and disclosing mandatory fees prominently and using clear language. Don’t bury information in fine print, behind vague hyperlinks, or in dense blocks of legal jargon.
  • Avoid misleading claims in advertising, including on websites, platforms, and social media. As a general rule, the FTC Act’s broad prohibition on deceptive or unfair practices applies in the rental market. Objective representations about properties, leasing terms, or services are subject to established FTC truth-in-advertising standards.
  • Properly document any charges to consumers. It’s illegal for landlords to charge tenants for ordinary wear and tear, preexisting damage, or for renovations or improvements that go beyond repairing damages they caused. Train your employees on what can be charged to residents and be sure to maintain all necessary documentation justifying any charges against residents’ security deposits.

This case, and a quick review of recent law enforcement actions, demonstrates the FTC’s longstanding commitment to ensuring honest practices in the rental market.

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Rochelle
September 25, 2024

I rent from invitationhomes and I pay 40 dollars a month for the ring camera and 9.95 a month for filters that gets delivered every 3 months.

Shantel
September 26, 2024

In reply to by Rochelle

Same for the air filter. I don’t even have a smart home and there is no filter in the world that needs to be changed every 3 mths. My utilities have been disconnected twice in 3 mths for no obvious reason until I had them transferred into my name. Then I still received a charge for gas with my rent!

Samantha True
September 26, 2024

In reply to by Rochelle

I’m also renting from Invitation Homes going on one month now they definitely are charging Junk fees. They have not learned their lesson. They did not have the home clean when we moved in. It was dirty screens weren’t properly attached. There was a lot of things that still needed to be done even on our move-in day. We did, however, take plenty of, The other issue is that they want certain utilities in their name so that they can control that information for whatever reason I feel like it’s an invasion of privacy not to mention the “”that they want to perform every six months that’s totally unnecessary is an invasion of privacy. In my opinion Invitation Homes definitely is a slumlord organization. Again, they have junk fees. They are not transparent when you first sign up you have no idea that all of these other things exist or how they operate until after you have applied giving your personal information and then giving a deposit by that time it’s too late to back out of renting from them and they know this again they’re being deceptive and non-transparent. Move forward with legal action

Frye
September 26, 2024

In reply to by Rochelle

This house needs a complete overhaul.
I have been charged for so many violations that were here before I moved in. I had no knowledge of the violations until the HOA president sent them to me 4 months into the contract.

Exterior needs so much work. I have numerous maintenance requests that have not been taken care of.

They do not return your phone calls in a timely manner.

They hit you with a very unfair late fee of 115.00.
There are charges for making payments online.
All extra fees are attached to the rent. You cannot get around it. Ring doorbells and filter fees every month.

Some type of sewer service fee.

They make you wait a whole day for a repair, only to reschedule at the last minute.

Master bath shower had a crack and it is softening in the middle. It is still not repaired.

Can’t wait to get out of this house.

The backyard and carport has buckled cement.

Please help. This has been going on for nine months.

Georgia location.

.

Cecilia Trambauer
September 26, 2024

In reply to by Rochelle

I face the same charges. When I moved in the house was in disrepair which they refused to fix. It's terrible how they get away with this. Even after winning the recent lawsuit renters are still being charged and not getting repairs.

David M
September 26, 2024

I never got my deposit back and left the home cleaner than when I moved in. When asking for my deposit, they sent me a bill for over $5,000. This was May 2020. Any recourse?

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