InvestigationNC tenant guide

How to report a slumlord in North Carolina

Documenting a negligent landlord protects you — and, on a public record, it protects the next tenant too.

Hall & Dixon, PLLC2026-04-106 min read
Documentary photo: a row of poorly maintained apartments

A "slumlord" isn't a legal term — it's a pattern: ignored repairs, unsafe conditions, deposits that never come back, and a lot of tenants with the same story. The way you fight that pattern is by turning it into a record.

Start with your own paper trail

This record is the foundation for any remedy — a demand letter, a code complaint, or a court case.

Report to the agencies that can act

Make it public and durable

Conditions reports, evictions, and code violations are increasingly part of the public record. North Carolina court filings (including summary-ejectment cases) and city code databases are public — and platforms like LawPassport aggregate them into a landlord's profile so the next renter can see the pattern before they sign.

That's the leverage a single complaint never had: a landlord who ignores one tenant can stonewall; a landlord whose pattern is on a public, sourced record has a real incentive to change.

What to do today

If conditions at your rental are unsafe and ignored, document them, report to code enforcement, and have an attorney send a demand under § 42-42 — every step adds to the record.

Have an attorney send it — $149

A note on tone

The goal isn't revenge — it's accountability. Stick to facts you can prove. A sourced, factual record holds up; an angry, exaggerated one doesn't.

Sources
  1. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42 (landlord to provide fit premises).
  2. NC Administrative Office of the Courts — public summary-ejectment records.

This is general information about North Carolina law, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. For advice on your situation, have an attorney review your facts.

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