Rent control rules in Indianapolis, IN β also known as rent stabilization or rent cap ordinances β limit annual rent increases and protect tenants from displacement.
Indianapolis has no rent control ordinance. Indiana state law (IC 32-31-3) preempts local governments from enacting rent control or rent stabilization measures. Landlords in Marion County may set and increase rents without restriction, subject only to lease terms and general contract law. There are no caps on rent increases, and no advance notice period for rent increases is mandated beyond what is specified in the lease agreement.
Indianapolis operates under free-market rental pricing. State law prohibits municipalities from enacting rent control or rent stabilization ordinances. Landlords may increase rent by any amount with proper notice, typically 30 to 60 days for month-to-month tenancies and at lease renewal for fixed-term leases. Tenants' primary protection is the lease agreement itself. State tenant rights laws still apply regarding habitability, security deposits, and notice requirements.
Rent increases without proper notice: tenant may challenge. Retaliatory rent increases after complaint: prohibited under state law. Violation of lease terms: standard landlord-tenant remedies.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis Revised Code section 391-302(c)(6) bans operating any vehicle, engine, or motor with straight pipes, muffler cutouts, bypasses, or exhaust that ...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis uses a plainly-audible standard combined with a 115 dB amplifier cap under Rev. Code Ch. 391, Article III rather than zone-based dBA limits.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis does not impose specific leaf blower hours, but Revised Code Sec. 391-302 prohibits operating any blower or power fan in a way that makes unreas...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis Revised Code section 391-302(c)(2) prohibits radios, loudspeakers, sound amplifiers, and musical instruments that make unreasonable noise, and t...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis has no blanket overnight street-parking ban for ordinary passenger vehicles, but Code Sec. 621-117 caps parking on any street at six hours witho...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis adopts the Indiana Residential Code under Rev. Code Ch. 536, which requires a minimum 48-inch barrier around residential pools 24 inches deep or...
See how Indianapolis's rent control rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.