Protect Tenants' Rights and Ban Unfair Rental Fees

The Issue

The Problem
Across Pennsylvania and the U.S., tenants are regularly subjected to one-sided rental agreements where landlords hold all the power. Lease contracts are often presented as non-negotiable, leaving renters with a “take it or leave it” choice. This imbalance creates serious consumer rights issues.

💬 What’s Wrong with Current Lease Practices?
Non-negotiable lease terms: Renters have virtually no say in lease conditions, making rental agreements functionally similar to public contracts — but without consumer protections.
Forced purchases of unrelated services: Landlords increasingly require tenants to buy renters' insurance, internet, pest control, and other services from specific providers — often at inflated rates. These are not core to the lease and should not be mandatory.
Administrative and processing fees: Tenants are routinely charged:

“Application fees” for each family member
“Administrative fees” or “move-in fees”
“Convenience fees” for online payments
These are operating costs of doing business and should not be offloaded onto renters.

🔍 Why It Matters
🏛️ Consumer laws in other sectors prohibit companies from bundling products and forcing purchases — why is rental housing an exception?
⚖️ The power imbalance is systemic. In most cities, rental housing is dominated by large landlords and property management firms that offer standard, pre-written contracts.
🧾 Hidden fees increase housing insecurity. For lower-income families, these extra charges can be the difference between affording housing or not.
🌆 Other cities and states are acting. California, Seattle, and New York have begun regulating “junk fees” and banning forced service bundling in housing.

What We’re Asking For
We urge lawmakers to pass legislation that:

Recognizes residential leases as consumer contracts, subject to fair practices laws.
Prohibits landlords from requiring tenants to purchase third-party services (insurance, internet, pest control, etc.) as a condition of tenancy.
Bans administrative and application fees not directly tied to tenant benefits or regulated by local ordinances.
Establishes enforceable guidelines for transparent and negotiable lease agreements.

✍️ Sign and Share
Tenants deserve fairness, transparency, and basic consumer protections.
Sign this petition to demand action and end exploitative rental practices.

6

The Issue

The Problem
Across Pennsylvania and the U.S., tenants are regularly subjected to one-sided rental agreements where landlords hold all the power. Lease contracts are often presented as non-negotiable, leaving renters with a “take it or leave it” choice. This imbalance creates serious consumer rights issues.

💬 What’s Wrong with Current Lease Practices?
Non-negotiable lease terms: Renters have virtually no say in lease conditions, making rental agreements functionally similar to public contracts — but without consumer protections.
Forced purchases of unrelated services: Landlords increasingly require tenants to buy renters' insurance, internet, pest control, and other services from specific providers — often at inflated rates. These are not core to the lease and should not be mandatory.
Administrative and processing fees: Tenants are routinely charged:

“Application fees” for each family member
“Administrative fees” or “move-in fees”
“Convenience fees” for online payments
These are operating costs of doing business and should not be offloaded onto renters.

🔍 Why It Matters
🏛️ Consumer laws in other sectors prohibit companies from bundling products and forcing purchases — why is rental housing an exception?
⚖️ The power imbalance is systemic. In most cities, rental housing is dominated by large landlords and property management firms that offer standard, pre-written contracts.
🧾 Hidden fees increase housing insecurity. For lower-income families, these extra charges can be the difference between affording housing or not.
🌆 Other cities and states are acting. California, Seattle, and New York have begun regulating “junk fees” and banning forced service bundling in housing.

What We’re Asking For
We urge lawmakers to pass legislation that:

Recognizes residential leases as consumer contracts, subject to fair practices laws.
Prohibits landlords from requiring tenants to purchase third-party services (insurance, internet, pest control, etc.) as a condition of tenancy.
Bans administrative and application fees not directly tied to tenant benefits or regulated by local ordinances.
Establishes enforceable guidelines for transparent and negotiable lease agreements.

✍️ Sign and Share
Tenants deserve fairness, transparency, and basic consumer protections.
Sign this petition to demand action and end exploitative rental practices.

The Decision Makers

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

Petition Updates

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Petition created on May 30, 2025