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    State-Specific Template

    Alaska Residential Lease Agreement Template

    A complete residential lease agreement drafted in accordance with Alaska landlord-tenant law. Covers late fee limits, security deposit rules, required disclosures, entry notice requirements, and notice-to-quit procedures, so you can rent with confidence from day one.

    What's Included
    • Drafted in accordance with Alaska landlord-tenant law
    • Alaska-compliant late fee clause (No statutory cap. Must be reasonable.)
    • Security deposit provisions matching state limits
    • Property condition disclosure section
    • Maintenance and repair responsibility clauses
    • Move-in and move-out procedures
    • Pet policy addendum template
    • Word and PDF formats included
    • Lifetime access with unlimited downloads
    Alaska Key Compliance Rules
    Quick-reference figures sourced from Alaska landlord-tenant statutes. Verify with current law before use.
    Late Fee LimitNo statutory cap. Courts apply the reasonableness standard.
    Grace PeriodNot required by statute. Typically 3-5 days by industry custom.
    Security Deposit Limit2 months rent (unless rent exceeds $2,000/month)
    Deposit Return Deadline14 days
    Entry Notice Required24 hours
    Notice to Quit (Non-Payment)7 days

    Important Notes

    14-day return with proper notice, 30 days without

    Why a Alaska-Specific Lease Matters

    Alaska is one of the most landlord-regulated states in the country. With 1 required disclosures and strict statutory deposit limits, a generic template typically covers only the federal lead-paint disclosure, leaving you exposed to deposit disputes, disclosure-based termination claims, and statutory damages.

    The security deposit clause in a generic template typically allows 'up to two months rent' or similar, but Alaska caps deposits at 2 months rent (unless rent exceeds $2,000/month). Charging beyond that limit, even by mistake, can give a tenant grounds to recover the excess plus penalties (in some states, double or triple the excess amount).

    Alaska relies on the federal lead-based-paint disclosure for properties built before 1978 and otherwise leaves disclosure requirements minimal at the state level. That doesn't mean disclosure doesn't matter. Local ordinances in Alaska's major cities may require additional disclosures for habitability, utilities, or pest history, and best practice across Alaska is to include disclosure language even where statute doesn't compel it. This template includes both the required federal disclosure and recommended additional disclosures.

    Alaska courts have broad authority to declare specific clauses unconscionable or contrary to public policy. The risk isn't a statutory damage award. It's losing a defense you assumed your lease provided. A clause that has been struck down in similar cases is one you cannot rely on, and standard templates often include exactly the language that gets struck down.

    Who Uses This Template

    Small Landlords

    1-20 rental units

    First-Time Landlords

    Getting started right

    Property Managers

    Professional documents

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Legal Disclaimer

    This template is provided for general informational purposes and is not a substitute for legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change frequently. We recommend consulting an Alaska-licensed attorney before using this template for a specific tenancy. RentLateFee.com makes no warranty that this template will be enforceable in any particular dispute.

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    Word and PDF formats included

    Need help calculating late fees for Alaska?

    Alaska Late Fee Calculator

    Learn about Alaska late fee rules.

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