How to write a demand letter to your landlord
A demand letter is the cheapest, most effective first step in most NC tenant disputes. Here's what goes in one.
A demand letter is the cheapest, most effective first step in most NC tenant disputes. Here's what goes in one.
A demand letter does one thing very well: it converts a frustrating back-and-forth into a dated, written record with a deadline and a consequence. For many NC tenant problems — an unreturned deposit, a refused repair, a charge you don't owe — it's the step that actually moves the landlord.
Send it to the landlord's last known address, and keep proof. Certified mail with return receipt is the gold standard — it's hard for a landlord to claim they never got it.
A letter from you is easy to ignore. A letter on a North Carolina attorney's letterhead, with their bar number, signals that the next step is real. When a landlord opens it, they're being contacted by a lawyer — not an app — and for most landlords it's cheaper to satisfy a valid demand than to fight one.
You can write your own letter using the structure above — or have a licensed NC attorney draft, review, and send it under their name for a flat fee. Same statute, very different weight in the landlord's inbox.
A demand letter starts the clock and builds the record; it isn't a guarantee. Some matters resolve the week the letter arrives. Others need a follow-up, and a few end up in small-claims court. The letter is what makes those later steps stronger.
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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