Real Estate Listings

The listings published on National Renters Authority serve as a structured reference directory of rental-related resources, legal frameworks, and housing programs relevant to tenants across all 50 U.S. states. Each entry is organized to surface specific statutes, agency contacts, or procedural guidance rather than generic housing advice. Understanding how these listings are structured — and what they do and do not cover — helps renters, advocates, and researchers locate actionable information efficiently. The scope runs from individual state-level renter protections to federal program overviews administered by agencies such as HUD and the U.S. Department of the Treasury.


What each listing covers

Every listing in this directory is built around a discrete legal or procedural topic within residential tenancy law. The subject matter falls into one of five classification types:

  1. Statutory rights — entries documenting tenant protections codified at the state or federal level, such as security deposit return rules or just-cause eviction laws
  2. Regulatory processes — entries explaining formal procedures tenants must follow, including the renter complaints filing process or the HUD complaint process for renters
  3. Program eligibility — entries covering assistance programs such as Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers and emergency rental assistance programs, including eligibility thresholds set by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
  4. Contractual frameworks — entries addressing lease structures, including month-to-month vs fixed-term lease distinctions and lease termination by tenant procedures
  5. Enforcement and dispute resolution — entries covering small claims court for renters, mediation for rental disputes, and related adjudicatory mechanisms

Each listing names the governing statute, agency, or published standard where one exists. For example, entries related to housing discrimination reference the federal Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq.) and the HUD enforcement framework under 24 CFR Part 103.


Geographic distribution

The directory encompasses entries spanning all 50 U.S. states, with density weighted toward jurisdictions that have enacted tenant-protective legislation beyond the federal baseline. California, New York, New Jersey, Oregon, and Washington account for a disproportionate share of state-specific statutory entries because those states have codified rent stabilization, just-cause eviction requirements, or enhanced habitability standards that diverge materially from the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA) model adopted by roughly 21 states as of the most recent National Conference of State Legislatures tracking.

Entries at the federal level cover programs and statutes administered by HUD, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and the U.S. Treasury Department's Emergency Rental Assistance program. Local housing authority entries — drawn from the network of approximately 3,300 public housing agencies operating under HUD oversight — appear where local rules create rights or obligations distinct from state law.

Geographic classification in each listing is explicit: entries are labeled Federal, State, or Local so readers can immediately assess which jurisdiction's law governs. State-specific detail is accessible through the state renter protection laws index.


How to read an entry

Each listing entry follows a consistent internal structure designed to reduce interpretive ambiguity:

The distinction between a comparative entry and a standalone entry matters for research purposes. Comparative entries — such as month-to-month vs fixed-term lease — analyze two or more legal configurations side by side, identifying where rights differ. Standalone entries document a single rule or program without a direct counterpart comparison.


What listings include and exclude

Included:

Excluded:

The real estate directory purpose and scope page documents the full editorial policy governing inclusion and exclusion decisions. Entries are updated when underlying statutes or program rules change at the source; the how to use this real estate resource page explains how readers should interpret version status and identify entries requiring local verification against current law.

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