Bill
LC 3395
Generally revise laws on short and long-term rentals
LC 3395 aimed to revise short- and long-term rental laws, touching landlord duties, tenant protections, and platform rules—yet the draft died in process, with no enacted changes.
Bill
LC 3395
LC 3395 aimed to revise short- and long-term rental laws, touching landlord duties, tenant protections, and platform rules—yet the draft died in process, with no enacted changes.
LC 3395 is a draft bill titled “Generally revise laws on short and long-term rentals,” categorized under Landlord and Tenant. The draft was introduced on December 14, 2024 and is identified as an (LC) draft. The bill’s status progressed from on hold to ultimately dying in the process.
Based on the title, LC 3395 aims to generally revise the legal framework governing short-term and long-term rental arrangements. While the specific text and provisions are not provided in the available information, the bill’s scope would typically involve updating definitions, regulatory standards, and processes related to rental housing to address evolving housing markets, consumer protections, and compliance requirements.
The actual provisions of LC 3395 are not included in the provided material. Therefore, no precise summary of changes, requirements, or burdens can be stated. If text becomes available, a section-by-section comparison would be produced to identify:
- New or revised definitions (e.g., what constitutes “short-term” vs. “long-term” rental)
- Licensing, registration, or compliance requirements for landlords and rental platforms
- Tenant protections (habitable standards, notice periods, security deposits)
- Landlord obligations (disclosures, maintenance, access)
- Eviction or dispute resolution procedures
- Enforcement mechanisms and penalties
- Local government or platform-specific regulations
“Died in Process” indicates the bill did not advance toward enactment and no further legislative action is anticipated for this draft. There is no enacted effect on current law from LC 3395.
If a future version of a similar bill were introduced, potential impacts could include:
- Clarified definitions to reduce ambiguity in rental classifications
- New licensing or reporting requirements for landlords and platforms
- Strengthened tenant protections and clearer eviction processes
- Updated safety, habitability, and disclosure standards
- Uniform statewide rules to preempt conflicting local ordinances
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.