AI Dispute Engine

Security Deposit Protection · Washington

Did your Washington landlord your landlord simply kept your entire deposit without providing any explanation, accounting, or itemized deductions?

Generate a formal statutory demand to claim your full refund and potential penalty damages.

Property managers cannot treat your deposit as a personal slush fund. In Washington, landlords face strict statutory deadlines and limits on how much they can withhold. If your landlord has your landlord simply kept your entire deposit without providing any explanation, accounting, or itemized deductions, they may have forfeited their right to keep any of your money. Use our informational utility to generate a professional Security Deposit Demand that formally documents their violation and demands immediate payment.

Your tenant rights: Washington security deposit law

Landlords often assume former tenants do not know their rights under the civil code. Here is the exact statutory reference you can use to hold them accountable in Washington.

Governing statute — Washington

Washington Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RCW 59.18.280)

RCW 59.18.280 requires landlords to provide a full written statement of deductions with receipts within 21 days. Any deduction without proper documentation is presumed invalid, and wrongfully withheld amounts trigger a matching statutory penalty.

Statutory leverage

recovery of the full deposit, statutory penalty equal to the wrongfully withheld amount, and court costs and attorney's fees

Why this withholding is illegal

Withholding a deposit without any written explanation is among the clearest violations of landlord-tenant law. Every jurisdiction with a security deposit statute requires at minimum a written accounting. Silence is not a defense; it is presumptive bad faith.

Statutory deadline

21 days

Evidence to lock in your claim

Document every attempt to contact the landlord for an explanation, save any response (or lack thereof), preserve your lease and deposit receipt, and note how many days have passed since move-out without any written communication regarding deductions.

Crucial tactic: Sending a structured, formal written demand that explicitly cites RCW 59.18.280 signals to the landlord that you understand the law. Property managers will often immediately issue a check to avoid defending a bad-faith claim in small claims court.

How to claim your deposit today

STEP 1
Detail the violation
Tell our system the exact date you moved out, the total amount of your original deposit, and how your Washington landlord violated RCW 59.18.280.
STEP 2
Generate the formal claim
Our software formats your facts into a professional notice, citing the specific sections of RCW 59.18.280 that govern the 21 days rule and bad faith penalties.
STEP 3
Deploy the notice
Download your formal PDF notice. Send it directly to your former landlord or property management company via certified mail to establish your official timeline and assert your consumer rights.
Choose a different dispute

Housing

Security Deposit Demand

Question 1 of 813%

The person, company, or agency this letter is addressed to.

Most states allow 2–3x deposit as statutory damages

  • 256-bit Encryption
  • Bank-Level Privacy
  • No Monthly Subscription

Live preview — updates as you type

June 1, 2026

[recipient name]
[recipient address]

Re: Demand for Return of Security Deposit

Dear [recipient name]:

I vacated the premises on [move out date] and you have failed to return my security deposit of $[deposit amount] within the statutory timeframe.

Facts:
[facts]

Requested resolution:
[desired outcome]

If the full amount is not returned within fourteen (14) days of this letter, I will file a small-claims action seeking the deposit, statutory damages, and attorneys' fees as permitted under applicable state landlord-tenant law.

Sincerely,

[user full name]
[user address]
Unlock full draft — $14.99