Louisiana Lease Agreement Template

Reviewed by the Agiled editorial teamUpdated June 2026

The lease template below works in Louisiana 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; Louisiana law fills in the blanks.

Louisiana lease rules at a glance

Security deposit capNo statutory cap
Deposit return deadline1 month after termination
Landlord entry noticeNo statute; lease terms govern
Month-to-month termination notice10 days' written notice before the end of the month
Late feesNo statutory cap

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 Louisiana handles lease agreements

Louisiana's 10-day month-to-month notice is the shortest in the nation — a civil-law quirk that surprises tenants and landlords arriving from any other state. In Louisiana, the security deposit rule is: no statutory cap. After move-out, the landlord's deadline to return the deposit is 1 month after termination, and ending a month-to-month tenancy takes 10 days' written notice before the end of the month. Confirm current figures against the state statute before signing — legislatures amend landlord-tenant law frequently.

Louisiana lease agreement FAQs

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

No statutory cap. 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 Louisiana?

1 month after termination. 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 Louisiana?

No statute; lease terms govern. 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 Louisiana?

10 days' written notice before the end of the month. 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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