Pet Policies

Pet policies for rental properties showing tenant with dog in apartment

Direct answer

What should I know about Pet Policies?

Pet Policies 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.

Ask Blue Castle for help

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.

Pet Policies

Clear pet policies protect rental properties while setting fair expectations for tenants. Written rules help reduce damage, disputes, and inconsistent enforcement.

What a rental pet policy is

A rental pet policy defines whether pets are allowed and under what conditions. It should clearly outline fees, limits, responsibilities, and enforcement rules.

  • States if pets are allowed or restricted
  • Defines pet limits and types
  • Explains fees or deposits if any
  • Sets expectations for care and behavior

Common pet policy options

No pets allowed

Prohibits animals other than legally required assistance animals.

Limited pets allowed

Allows specific types, sizes, or numbers of pets with conditions.

Pets with approval

Requires screening and written approval before a pet is allowed.

Pet friendly housing

Encourages pet ownership while managing risk through clear rules.

What to include in a pet policy

  • Allowed pet types and maximum number
  • Size or weight limits if any
  • Pet fees or pet rent if charged
  • Vaccination and licensing requirements
  • Noise, nuisance, and damage rules
  • Removal procedures for violations

Related: How to Write a Lease.

Pet fees and deposits

Many landlords charge pet related fees or deposits to offset potential damage. These should be clearly labeled and documented.

  • One time pet fees
  • Refundable pet deposits
  • Monthly pet rent
  • Clear explanation of what fees cover

See Security Deposit Rules.

Pet policies and Fair Housing

Pet policies must distinguish between pets and assistance animals required under Fair Housing laws.

  • Assistance animals are not pets
  • No pet fees for assistance animals
  • Use a consistent accommodation process
  • Document requests and approvals

For compliance context, review Fair Housing Screening Rules.

Best practices for pet policies

  1. Put all pet rules in writing
  2. Apply the same standards to all tenants
  3. Screen pets consistently when allowed
  4. Inspect units regularly
  5. Document violations and resolutions

Common pet policy mistakes

  • Relying on verbal approvals
  • Inconsistent enforcement
  • Charging improper fees
  • Failing to distinguish assistance animals

Strong documentation reduces disputes. See Lease Requirements.

Need help creating a pet policy?

We help landlords create clear pet policies that balance tenant demand with property protection.

Related leasing pages

Pet policy FAQs

Can a landlord ban pets?
Often yes, except for assistance animals which are not considered pets.
Can I charge pet rent?
Many landlords do, but it should be clearly disclosed in the lease.

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 Pet Policies?

Pet Policies 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.