Rent control rules in Cedar Falls, IA β also known as rent stabilization or rent cap ordinances β limit annual rent increases and protect tenants from displacement.
Iowa preempts local rent control. Iowa Code 364.3(9) bars any city from adopting or enforcing an ordinance that limits the amount of rent charged for leasing private residential or commercial property. There is no statewide rent cap, and no Iowa city has rent control. The only exception is residential property in which the city itself holds a property interest.
Iowa Code 364.3, listing limitations on city powers, provides at subsection 9 that "A city shall not adopt or enforce any ordinance imposing any limitation on the amount of rent that can be charged for leasing private residential or commercial property. This subsection does not prevent the right of a city to manage and control residential property in which the city has a property interest." This is a clear statewide preemption of municipal rent control over private rentals. Iowa imposes no statewide cap on rent or on rent increases, so for private property a landlord may raise rent by any amount upon lease renewal, subject only to the standard notice required to end or change a periodic tenancy. The narrow carve-out applies only where the city has its own ownership interest in the property.
Any city ordinance limiting rent on private residential or commercial property in violation of Iowa Code 364.3(9) is beyond the city's powers and unenforceable; a property owner could have a court strike it down. The statute sets no fine because a preempted measure simply has no legal effect.
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