Building Codes & Habitability — Connecticut
Warranty of habitability, repair obligations, and city rental programs
State Habitability Standard
Minimum Habitability Requirements
- Structural safety: sound roof, walls, floors
- Working plumbing and hot water
- Adequate heat
- Working electrical systems
- Pest-free premises
- Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors
Repair Obligations & Tenant Remedies
Connecticut does not have a statutory repair-and-deduct remedy. Tenants must typically pursue code enforcement or court action for habitability failures. Consult Connecticut General Statutes §§ 47a-1 et seq. for current tenant remedies.
City-Level Rental Programs
Some cities require rental registration, periodic inspections, or have specific habitability ordinances beyond state law. Enter your city to check for a local program.
Known Connecticut cities in our database: check major cities in Connecticut above for city-specific programs.
Governing Statute
Connecticut General Statutes §§ 47a-1 et seq.
Code Details — Connecticut
Relevant building code and habitability requirements from our corpus:
Building Codes — Delaware (DE) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Delaware (DE) Rental Housing Adopted code: Delaware State Fire Prevention Regulations and local building codes based on 2018 IBC. Habitability statute: 25 Del. C. §5305 (Residential Landlord-Tenant Code). Heating: Oct 1 through April 30; landlord must maintain 65°F in all habitable rooms. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room and on each floor; landlord installs; hardwired with battery backup in new construction; battery acceptable in existing (16 Del. C. §6604). CO detectors: required in all residential units with fuel-burning appliances or attached garage (16 Del. C. §6605). Repair-and-deduct: yes — after written notice and landlord failure within 15 days; cap is $75 per repair. Notable: Delaware preempts local rent control. Wilmington has local housing code enforcement. Delaware's residential landlord-tenant code is one of the more detailed mid-Atlantic codes; landlord must provide written receipts for security deposits and comply with interest requirements.
City Building Codes — Washington, DC
City Building Codes — Washington, DC DC Department of Buildings (DOB) enforces DC Construction Codes (based on 2018 IBC with DC amendments) and DC Property Maintenance Code. Rental registration: DC Rental Accommodations Division (RAD): ALL rental units must be registered (DC Code §42-3502.05); annual fee per unit. DC Rent Control: Rental Housing Act of 1985 (DC Code §42-3501 et seq.): applies to most residential units in DC not built after 1975 or owned by small landlords (4 or fewer units owner-occupied); annual increase capped at CPI + 2% (or 10% max); just cause eviction required. DC Basic Business License: required for all rental housing operations. Heating: Oct 15 through May 15; landlord must maintain 68°F. DC Housing Code (14 DCMR): comprehensive minimum standards for all rental housing including structural, plumbing, mechanical, electrical, and occupancy. DC Office of the Tenant Advocate: provides tenant legal assistance and advocates for habitability. Unique: DC requires landlords to offer lease renewal unless grounds for non-renewal exist.
Building Codes — Rhode Island (RI) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Rhode Island (RI) Rental Housing Adopted code: Rhode Island State Building Code based on 2018 IBC. Habitability statute: RI Gen. Laws §34-18-22 (Residential Landlord and Tenant Act). Heating: Sept 1 through June 15; landlord must maintain 68°F in all habitable rooms. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room and on each floor; landlord installs; hardwired with battery backup required in buildings of more than 2 units; battery in single-family and duplex (RI Gen. Laws §23-28.1-5). CO detectors: required in all residential units with fuel-burning appliances or attached garage (RI Gen. Laws §23-28.1-5.1). Repair-and-deduct: yes — after written notice and landlord failure within 20 days; cap is $125 or one month's rent. Notable: Providence has a rental registration and inspection program. Rhode Island preempts local rent control. RI Department of Health has jurisdiction over minimum housing standards in addition to building code.
Building Codes — Hawaii (HI) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Hawaii (HI) Rental Housing Adopted code: Hawaii State Building Code based on 2018 IBC with local amendments per county. Habitability statute: HRS §521-42 (Hawaii Residential Landlord-Tenant Code). Heating: Hawaii's climate makes heating requirements less relevant; landlord must maintain all systems in working order; no cold-weather heating season defined. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room and on each floor; landlord installs; battery or hardwired (HRS §132-7.5). CO detectors: required in all residential units with fuel-burning appliances (HRS §132-8). Repair-and-deduct: yes — after written notice and landlord failure within reasonable time; cap is $500 or one month's rent. Notable: Hawaii has the highest housing costs per capita of any state; Honolulu has explored rent control. Owner-occupied rentals under 6 units are regulated by county. Each county (Honolulu, Maui, Hawaii, Kauai) has its own building permit office and inspection program.
Building Codes — Montana (MT) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Montana (MT) Rental Housing Adopted code: Montana Building Codes Act based on 2018 IBC; enforcement is local. Habitability statute: MCA §70-24-303 (Montana Residential Landlord and Tenant Act). Heating: Oct 1 through April 30; landlord must maintain 68°F in all habitable rooms. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room, outside sleeping areas, and on each floor; landlord installs; battery or hardwired (MCA §50-61-101). CO detectors: required in all residential units with fuel-burning appliances or attached garage (MCA §50-61-102). Repair-and-deduct: yes — after written notice and landlord failure within 14 days; cap is $300 or one month's rent. Notable: Montana preempts local rent control. Billings and Missoula have local housing code enforcement programs. Montana's rental market is tightening rapidly due to population growth; enforcement capacity limited in rural areas.
Building Codes — Mississippi (MS) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Mississippi (MS) Rental Housing Adopted code: Mississippi Building Code based on 2018 IBC; enforcement is primarily local. Habitability statute: Miss. Code §89-8-17 (landlord obligations under Landlord and Tenant Act). Heating: landlord must maintain working heating system; no specific minimum temperature. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room and on each floor; landlord installs; battery or hardwired (Miss. Code §45-11-201). CO detectors: no statewide requirement. No repair-and-deduct right. Tenant remedy: terminate lease after 30-day written notice and failure to repair. Notable: Mississippi has among the most limited residential tenant protections in the US. Local codes vary widely; rural areas often lack formal code enforcement. Jackson has a local housing code enforcement office.
Building Codes — Washington (WA) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Washington (WA) Rental Housing Adopted code: Washington State Building Code based on 2021 IBC/IRC with WA amendments. Habitability statute: RCW 59.18 (Residential Landlord-Tenant Act — RLTA). Heating: landlord must provide heating equipment capable of maintaining 70°F in all inhabited rooms during cold weather — 70°F is stricter than IPMC. Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room, on each floor, and outside sleeping areas; landlord installs and maintains; if tenant damages detector landlord may charge for replacement. CO detectors: required in all dwellings with fossil fuel appliances or attached garages (RCW 43.44.110). Repair-and-deduct: yes — after 10-day written notice to landlord; cap of $300 or half month's rent (whichever is greater) per repair incident. Seattle Rental Registration and Inspection Ordinance (RRIO): all rental units in Seattle must be registered; periodic inspections required. Notable: WA bans "no-cause" evictions for most tenancies (just cause required after 20+ days); strong anti-retaliation protections.
Building Codes — California (CA) Rental Housing
Building Codes — California (CA) Rental Housing Adopted code: 2019 IPMC with California amendments; California Building Standards Code (Title 24). Habitability statute: Cal. Civ. Code §1941 (implied warranty of habitability); Cal. Civ. Code §1941.1 (enumerated conditions). Heating: landlord must provide heating to maintain 70°F in all habitable rooms (stricter than IPMC 68°F). SB 721 (2019): mandatory inspection of exterior elevated elements (decks, balconies, walkways) every 6 years for multi-family buildings with 3+ units. Smoke detectors: new construction requires hardwired with battery backup; existing pre-1992 buildings may use battery-only; must be in each bedroom and on each floor. CO detectors: required in all dwelling units with fossil fuel-burning appliances or attached garage (Cal. Health & Safety Code §17926). Repair-and-deduct: yes — tenant may deduct cost of repairs from rent up to one month's rent after landlord fails to repair within 30 days of written notice (Civ. Code §1942). Lead paint: all pre-1978 units must use EPA-certified contractors for any renovation disturbing painted surfaces. Rent control: statewide AB 1482 caps annual rent increases at 5% + CPI (max 10%) for qualifying multifamily buildings 15+ years old. Notable: CA requires landlords to install water-conserving plumbing fixtures when replacing fixtures in pre-2017 buildings.
City Building Codes — Denver, CO
City Building Codes — Denver, CO Denver Community Planning and Development (CPD) enforces Denver Building and Fire Code, based on 2021 IBC/IFC with Denver amendments. Denver Residential Rental License: all residential rental units in Denver require a license from CPD; fee per unit; first-time rental units require inspection. Denver Minimum Housing Standards: incorporates IPMC with Denver additions; specific standards for heating, ventilation, and lighting. Heating: Denver requires 68°F minimum in all habitable rooms (local ordinance). CO detectors: CO Rev. Stat. §38-12-102.5 requirement applies. Denver Just Cause Eviction: adopted 2023 — landlords must state a valid reason from enumerated list for eviction after 12 months of tenancy. Denver Fair Housing: Denver Human Rights and Community Partnerships enforces local fair housing ordinance including source-of-income discrimination prohibition (Section 8 tenants must not be refused). Unique: Denver Short-Term Rental (STR): registration required; limited to primary residence only.
Building Codes — Maine (ME) Rental Housing
Building Codes — Maine (ME) Rental Housing Adopted code: Maine Building Codes based on 2015 IBC/IRC. Habitability statute: 14 MRS §6021 (warranty of habitability). Heating: Sept 15 through May 15; landlord must maintain 68°F in all habitable rooms (14 MRS §6021). Smoke detectors: required in each sleeping room, outside sleeping areas, and on each floor; landlord installs; hardwired with battery backup in new construction; battery in existing (25 MRS §2464). CO detectors: required in all residential units with fuel-burning appliances or attached garage (25 MRS §2464-A). No repair-and-deduct right by statute. Tenant remedy: rent escrow petition or terminate lease after written notice and 14-day failure. Notable: Maine's housing code is part of the implied warranty of habitability statute — a single violation of 14 MRS §6021 can be asserted as a defense to eviction. Portland has enacted local rent control (3% cap) — held valid after 2021 referendum.
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