Rental Fees in Nevada
Your landlord's lease has 14 line items that weren't in the listing. Here's which ones Nevada law lets you push back on.
Nevada regulates 2 categories of rental fees, including application fee, late fee.
•Common Charges
Fees Your Nevada Landlord Can Charge
These fees show up on leases across Nevada. Some are standard operating costs passed to tenants. Others are profit centers dressed up as necessities. The “Negotiable” column tells you which ones other tenants have successfully pushed back on.
| Fee | Typical Range | Negotiable? |
|---|---|---|
| Valet Trash | $20–$45/mo | Rarely |
| Amenity Fee | $25–$75/mo | Often yes |
| Pest Control Fee | $5–$15/mo | Rarely |
| Technology/Internet Package | $30–$75/mo | Often yes |
| Pet Rent | $25–$75/mo | Often yes |
| Parking Fee | $50–$200/mo | Often yes |
| Administrative Fee | $50–$300 one-time | Often yes |
| Utility Billing Fee (RUBS) | $20–$60/mo | Rarely |
| Common Area Maintenance | $10–$30/mo | Rarely |
| Renters Insurance Requirement | $15–$30/mo | Rarely |
•Regulated Fees
Fees That Are Regulated in Nevada
Nevada law puts limits on these fees. If your landlord charged you more than the cap — or failed to follow the rules below — you have a statutory basis to dispute.
| Fee Type | Cap | Rule | Statute |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application fee | See rule | Application fees must be limited to actual screening costs. Landlord must provide receipt upon request. | Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.200 |
| Late fee | See rule | Late fees must be reasonable and stated in the lease. Cannot be charged until rent is at least 3 days late for weekly, 5 days for monthly tenancies. | Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.200(3)(g) |
Application fees must be limited to actual screening costs. Landlord must provide receipt upon request. (Nevada)
Late fees must be reasonable and stated in the lease. Cannot be charged until rent is at least 3 days late for weekly, 5 days for monthly tenancies. (Nevada)
•Dispute Process
How to Dispute a Fee in Nevada
File in Nevada Justice Court (small claims up to $10,000). Nevada landlord-tenant law (NRS Ch. 118A) provides specific protections.
- Pull your lease. Find the exact clause authorizing the fee. If it is not in the lease, that is your first argument.
- Write your landlord. Send a written dispute (email is fine) citing the specific fee amount, why you believe it is improper, and what remedy you want. Keep it factual.
- File if ignored. If your landlord does not respond within 14 days, file in small claims court in the county where the rental property is located. Bring your lease, payment records, and any written communications.
•Transparency
Is Your Landlord Required to Disclose Fees?
Nevada does not have a blanket statute requiring landlords to disclose all fees before lease signing. But that does not give them a free pass.
Courts routinely side with tenants when fees were hidden in addenda, introduced after move-in, or charged for services never provided. If your landlord added a fee that was not in your original lease, document the timeline and dispute it in writing. The burden of proving you agreed to the fee falls on the landlord.
●Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my Nevada landlord charge a valet trash fee?
It depends. Nevada regulates certain rental fees. Check the statute for your specific fee type. If the fee was not disclosed before you signed the lease — you may have grounds to dispute it.
Are amenity fees legal in Nevada?
Amenity fees are not outright banned in most states, including Nevada. But if your landlord charges you for amenities you cannot access or never use — a pool fee when the pool is closed, a gym fee when the gym is under renovation — that fee may be disputable.
How do I dispute a rental fee in Nevada?
File in Nevada Justice Court (small claims up to $10,000). Nevada landlord-tenant law (NRS Ch. 118A) provides specific protections.
Does Nevada require landlords to disclose all fees upfront?
Nevada does not have a blanket fee disclosure requirement. However, courts generally look unfavorably on fees that were hidden or not clearly communicated at lease signing. Always request a full fee schedule in writing before you sign.
Can I negotiate rental fees in Nevada?
Some fees are negotiable — amenity fees, pet rent, and parking fees are commonly reduced or waived during lease negotiation. Others like valet trash and utility billing (RUBS) are typically non-negotiable because the landlord has a contract with a third-party vendor. Always ask. The worst they can say is no.
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DepositHawk is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Information and documents are for informational purposes only. No attorney-client relationship is created. Consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.