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Last updated: April 2026Researched by DepositHawk Research Team

Utility Billing Rights in Nevada

Your landlord splits one water bill across 200 units using a formula you never see. In Nevada, they have to show you the master bill if you ask. Here's how.

In Nevada, RUBS billing is allowed, landlords must disclose utility billing methods under Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290.

Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290

Billing Methods

How Utility Billing Works in Nevada

Landlords in Nevada typically use one of three methods to bill tenants for utilities: include it in rent, install sub-meters for each unit, or use RUBS (Ratio Utility Billing System) to divide the master bill by unit size, occupancy, or some other formula. RUBS is where most overcharges happen — tenants pay a share of the building's total bill without seeing what the total actually was.

RUBS Billing: Allowed

RUBS allowed but landlord must disclose billing method and provide a copy of the allocation formula. Cannot charge more than actual cost.

Sub-Metering Required: Not required

Nevada does not require sub-metering to bill tenants individually. Landlords can use allocation methods like RUBS instead.

Markup Rules

Can Your Landlord Mark Up Utilities?

Nevada does not allow landlords to add administrative markups to utility charges passed through to tenants.

Nevada does not allow landlords to add administrative markups to utility charges passed through to tenants.

Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290

Disclosure

Must Your Landlord Show You the Bill?

Yes. Nevada requires landlords to disclose utility billing details to tenants. If you ask for the master bill and your landlord refuses, that refusal itself is a violation you can cite in a dispute.

Request the bill in writing — email works. Ask for the total billed amount, the billing period, and the formula used to calculate your share. If the numbers don't add up, you have grounds to challenge the charge.

Nevada requires landlords to disclose utility billing methods and provide billing details to tenants upon request under Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290.

Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290

Regulatory Body

Your Public Utility Commission

Public Utilities Commission of Nevada

Phone: 1-775-684-6101

Website: https://puc.nv.gov

The Public Utilities Commission of Nevada handles complaints about utility companies directly. For landlord-tenant utility disputes, you may also need to go through small claims court or your state's attorney general consumer protection division.

Dispute Process

How to Challenge a Utility Charge

File complaint with Public Utilities Commission of Nevada or pursue in justice court.

  1. Get the master bill. Request it in writing. You want the total amount the utility company charged, the billing period, and the number of units being billed.
  2. Do the math yourself. Divide the master bill by the number of units (or by square footage, if that's the allocation method). Compare that to what you were charged. If there's a gap, that gap is either a markup or an error.
  3. Dispute in writing. Email your landlord with the numbers. Cite Nev. Rev. Stat. § 118A.290 if applicable. State the specific amount you believe you were overcharged and what remedy you want.
  4. Escalate if needed. If your landlord ignores you or refuses to adjust, file a complaint with the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada and consider small claims court in the county where the property is located.

Red Flags

Signs You're Being Overcharged for Utilities

  • Your bill doesn't match your usage. You live alone in a studio and your water bill is $90/month. That is not your water — that is a building-wide cost being split unevenly.
  • The billing company is not the utility company. If your “utility bill” comes from a third-party RUBS provider instead of the actual utility, your landlord is using a billing middleman — and that middleman charges fees that get passed to you.
  • Your bill went up but nothing changed. Same unit, same habits, same season — but your utility charge jumped 20%. That spike likely reflects a change in how the landlord allocates costs, not a change in your usage.
  • You can't find the billing method in your lease. If your lease says “tenant pays utilities” but doesn't specify the method (RUBS, sub-metered, flat fee), that vagueness works in your favor during a dispute.
  • Your landlord refuses to share the master bill. This is the biggest red flag. If they have nothing to hide, the bill takes 30 seconds to forward. In Nevada, they are legally required to share it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Can my Nevada landlord use RUBS to bill me for utilities?

Yes. Nevada allows landlords to use Ratio Utility Billing Systems (RUBS) to split utility costs across tenants. However, there are rules: RUBS allowed but landlord must disclose billing method and provide a copy of the allocation formula. Cannot charge more than actual cost.

Does my Nevada landlord have to show me the actual utility bill?

Yes. Nevada requires landlords to disclose utility billing details to tenants upon request. If your landlord refuses to show you the master bill, that is a violation you can report.

Can my Nevada landlord mark up my utility charges?

Nevada does not allow landlords to add administrative markups to utility charges passed through to tenants.

How do I dispute a utility charge in Nevada?

File complaint with Public Utilities Commission of Nevada or pursue in justice court.

Where do I file a utility billing complaint in Nevada?

Contact the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada at 1-775-684-6101 or visit https://puc.nv.gov. They handle complaints about utility billing practices. For landlord-tenant disputes specifically, you may also file in small claims court.

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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.