Move Out Checklist

Move out checklist showing rental inspection and condition comparison

Direct answer

What should I know about Move Out Checklist?

Move Out Checklist helps rental owners make a clearer decision about leasing, tenant screening, cash flow, risk and long-term property performance. The best answer depends on the property, local demand, rent readiness, owner goals, legal requirements and the cost of vacancy or mistakes.

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Key points before you decide

  • Start with the owner objective: stable income, lower vacancy, stronger screening, better systems or a decision to keep or sell.
  • Measure the issue in dollars and time, including vacancy, repairs, leasing delays, compliance risk and management effort.
  • Use a documented process so tenant decisions, leasing steps and owner expectations are consistent.

Move Out Checklist

A move out checklist documents the condition of a rental at the end of a lease. It supports fair security deposit handling and provides a clear comparison to the original move in condition.

What a move out checklist is

A move out checklist is a structured inspection completed after a tenant vacates. It records the property condition, identifies damage beyond normal wear, and supports any deposit deductions.

  • Completed after keys are returned
  • Compared against the move in checklist
  • Used to support itemized deposit statements
  • Stored with the lease file

Why move out checklists matter

  • Reduces security deposit disputes
  • Creates defensible documentation
  • Clarifies normal wear versus damage
  • Supports consistent enforcement

What to include on a move out checklist

General information

Property address, tenant names, lease end date, inspection date, and forwarding address if provided.

Cleaning condition

Floors, appliances, bathrooms, and surfaces compared to move in condition.

Walls, ceilings, and floors

Holes, stains, damage, or excessive wear beyond normal use.

Appliances and fixtures

Working condition, missing parts, or damage not present at move in.

Keys and access devices

Keys, remotes, fobs, garage openers, and access cards returned.

Photos and documentation

Timestamped photos or videos to support inspection notes.

Normal wear versus damage

Move out evaluations should focus on changes from move in, not age or ordinary use.

  • Normal wear reflects expected use over time
  • Damage results from neglect or misuse
  • Consistency across tenants is essential
  • Documentation supports decisions

Move out checklists and Fair Housing

The same inspection standards should be applied to all tenants in similar units.

  • Use the same checklist format for every move out
  • Avoid subjective or selective enforcement
  • Apply damage standards consistently
  • Document approved accommodations

For compliance context, review Fair Housing Screening Rules.

Common move out checklist mistakes

  • No comparison to the move in checklist
  • Charging for normal wear
  • Missing photos or documentation
  • Inconsistent inspection standards

Strong documentation supports deposit decisions. See Security Deposit Rules.

Need a move out checklist process?

We help landlords build repeatable move out inspections that reduce disputes and protect cash flow.

Related leasing pages

Move out checklist FAQs

Should tenants attend the move out inspection?
It can be helpful but is not always required. Documentation is critical either way.
Do I need photos for every move out?
Photos are strongly recommended to support any deductions and reduce disputes.

Own rentals in Florida and need help buying or selling investment property? Visit Golden Hour Real Estate. Need financing for rental properties? Visit 360 Mortgage. Need insurance guidance for rentals? Visit Henson Agency.

Frequently asked questions

What should owners know about Move Out Checklist?

Move Out Checklist should be evaluated as a practical operating decision, not just a one-time task. Small process gaps can affect vacancy, risk and cash flow.

When should a landlord ask for help?

A landlord should ask for help when vacancy, screening, maintenance coordination, legal notices or decision fatigue start affecting the property’s performance.

What is the next step?

The next step is to compare the current rental process against a documented management or leasing plan and identify the highest-cost bottleneck.