Alaska Lease Agreement Template

Reviewed by the Agiled editorial teamUpdated June 2026

The lease template below works in Alaska once you fill in the state-specific numbers — and those numbers are what this page covers: the deposit cap, how fast the deposit must come back, how much notice the landlord owes before entering, and what it takes to end a month-to-month tenancy. The download is the same attorney-style boilerplate as our standard lease; Alaska law fills in the blanks.

Alaska lease rules at a glance

Security deposit capCapped at 2 months' rent (no cap where rent exceeds $2,000/month)
Deposit return deadline14 days with proper notice; 30 days otherwise
Landlord entry notice24 hours' notice
Month-to-month termination notice30 days' written notice
Late feesNo statutory cap; must be reasonable and in the lease

State laws change frequently and this summary is not legal advice. Verify current rules against the state statute or with a licensed attorney before relying on them.

How Alaska handles lease agreements

Alaska's 14-day deposit return is among the fastest in the country, and the two-month cap disappears entirely on higher-rent units. In Alaska, the security deposit rule is: capped at 2 months' rent (no cap where rent exceeds $2,000/month). After move-out, the landlord's deadline to return the deposit is 14 days with proper notice; 30 days otherwise, and ending a month-to-month tenancy takes 30 days' written notice. Confirm current figures against the state statute before signing — legislatures amend landlord-tenant law frequently.

Alaska lease agreement FAQs

How much can a landlord charge for a security deposit in Alaska?

Capped at 2 months' rent (no cap where rent exceeds $2,000/month). Put the exact deposit amount in the lease, along with where it is held, and check the current statute — several states have recently lowered their caps.

How long does a landlord have to return a security deposit in Alaska?

14 days with proper notice; 30 days otherwise. The return should include an itemized statement for any deductions; missing the statutory deadline can expose the landlord to penalty damages in many states.

How much notice does a landlord need to enter a rental in Alaska?

24 hours' notice. Even where no statute sets a number, writing a notice period into the lease (24–48 hours is the national norm) protects both sides.

How much notice is required to end a month-to-month tenancy in Alaska?

30 days' written notice. Give notice in writing and keep proof of delivery — the notice period is one of the most commonly litigated lease terms.

The full lease agreement guide

Clause-by-clause guidance, common mistakes, and the complete template text live on the main page: Lease Agreement Template — full guide and download.

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