Your rental deposit (bond, security deposit, Kaution) is a significant upfront cost — and one of the biggest sources of disputes between tenants and landlords. Understanding the rules in your country before you sign a lease can save you thousands.
Australia
- Maximum: 4 weeks’ rent (varies by state; NSW/VIC/QLD cap at 4 weeks)
- Must be lodged with the state rental bond authority (Rental Bond Board in NSW, RTBA in VIC, RTA in QLD)
- NOT held by the landlord personally — if they suggest this, it’s a red flag
- Return timeline: 14 days after lease end, or 14 days after claim dispute resolution
- Tip: Photograph everything at move-in. Submit a detailed condition report.
United Kingdom
- Maximum: 5 weeks’ rent (for annual rent under £50,000)
- Must be protected in a government-approved Tenancy Deposit Scheme (TDS, MyDeposits, DPS) within 30 days
- If the landlord fails to protect it, you can claim 1–3× the deposit amount as compensation
- Return timeline: 10 days after both parties agree on deductions
United States
- No federal cap — varies by state. Common: 1 month’s rent
- Some cities (Chicago, LA) have specific deposit rules
- Must be held in a separate escrow account in some states
- Return timeline: 14–45 days depending on state. California = 21 days
- Tip: Some states require the landlord to pay interest on deposits. Check local law.
Canada
- Ontario: Maximum = last month’s rent (can be used as last month’s payment, not just damage deposit)
- BC: Maximum = half month’s rent. Must be held in an interest-bearing account
- Quebec: No security deposit allowed at all (unique in North America)
New Zealand
- Maximum: 4 weeks’ rent
- Must be lodged with Tenancy Services within 23 working days
- Return timeline: Refund form signed by both parties, processed within 5 working days
- Tip: NZ’s bond system is one of the most tenant-friendly in the world
Germany
- Maximum: 3 months’ cold rent (Kaltmiete — rent without utilities)
- Must be held in a separate savings account (Sparkonto) paying market interest
- The interest belongs to the tenant
- Return timeline: Landlord has 6 months to settle claims. Reasonable partial returns sooner.
France
- Maximum: 1 month’s rent for unfurnished, 2 months for furnished
- No central scheme — landlord holds directly (risky)
- Return timeline: 1 month (unfurnished) or 2 months (furnished) after key return
- Tip: The “état des lieux” (inventory inspection) at check-in and check-out is legally binding. Be thorough.
Singapore
- Maximum: 1 month’s rent for a 1-year lease, 2 months for a 2-year lease
- No mandatory protection scheme
- Return timeline: Typically 7–14 days after handover, assuming no disputes
- Tip: Take timestamped photos of every wall, appliance, and fixture
Japan
- “Shikikin” (deposit): Typically 1–2 months’ rent. Refundable minus cleaning/repairs
- “Reikin” (key money): 1–2 months’ rent, NON-refundable “gift” to landlord. Common in Tokyo, less so in smaller cities
- No protection scheme — landlords hold directly
- Tip: Look for “reikin zero” properties to avoid the non-refundable key money
South Korea
- “Bojeunggeum” (key money/deposit): ₩5–10 million for one-rooms, ₩50–100 million+ for jeonse (lump-sum lease)
- Refundable at end of lease. Held by landlord.
- Tip: Register your deposit with the local government office for protection. If the landlord goes bankrupt, you’re a priority creditor.
How to Protect Yourself
- Get everything in writing — deposit amount, conditions for deductions, return timeline
- Document the property — photos + video at move-in, shared with landlord by email (creates a timestamped record)
- Know the law — deposit rules vary enormously. 10 minutes of research can save you a full deposit
- Don’t pay until you sign — never transfer a deposit before signing the lease