Sagareus Property Management Blog

King County Landlord Tenant Laws: What Applies in Renton

Written by Brittany French | Jul 8, 2026 6:00:00 PM

King County landlord tenant laws, including the county's 2021 tenant protections ordinance, apply in unincorporated King County, not inside Renton city limits.

A rental with a "Renton, WA" mailing address may sit inside the city of Renton, in an unincorporated pocket like Fairwood, East Renton Highlands, or Skyway, or in a neighboring city entirely. Inside city limits, Renton requires annual rental registration; landlords are not currently required to hold a city business license, though property management companies and short-term rentals are.

Everywhere, Washington's 2026 statewide rules on rent increases, deposits, and screening apply on top.

This is one of the most common compliance mistakes we see from owners in the Renton area: applying county rules to a city parcel, or assuming a city registration requirement covers a Fairwood townhome that is not actually in the city at all. The mailing address will not tell you.

This guide maps out which rules apply where, what each layer actually requires, and how to confirm your parcel's real jurisdiction in about two minutes.

Why One Renton Address Can Sit in Three Different Rule Sets

The U.S. Postal Service assigns "Renton, WA" addresses across a far larger footprint than the incorporated city. Fairwood, East Renton Highlands, and parts of the May Valley and Skyway/West Hill areas all carry Renton addresses, yet they are unincorporated King County, governed by county code, not city code.

That creates three distinct rule sets an owner might be under:

  • City of Renton: the Renton Municipal Code applies, including the city's rental registration program and business licensing. King County's tenant protections ordinance does not.
  • Unincorporated King County: the county's tenant protections ordinance (Ordinance 19311, adopted in 2021 and codified in King County Code chapters 12.20 and 12.25) applies, layering county requirements on top of state law. The city of Renton's registration program does not.
  • Everywhere: Washington's Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RCW 59.18), including the 2025 rent stabilization law and the statewide notice, deposit, and screening rules, applies regardless of which side of the line your parcel sits on.

A portfolio of three rentals "in Renton" can genuinely span all three. We manage portfolios exactly like that, and the lease packets, notice timelines, and registration calendars differ for each property.

How to Tell if King County Landlord Tenant Laws Cover Your Parcel

Do not rely on the mailing address, the school district, or what the listing said when you bought the property. Check the parcel itself:

  • King County Parcel Viewer (gismaps.kingcounty.gov): search your address or parcel number and check the jurisdiction field. It will state the incorporated city or identify the parcel as unincorporated King County.
  • King County's tenant protections page (kingcounty.gov): the county publishes an interactive map showing exactly which areas its ordinance covers.
  • Property tax statement: the taxing districts listed often signal jurisdiction, though the GIS lookup is the authoritative answer.

Watch two practical traps:

  • Annexation moves the line over time. A parcel that was unincorporated when you bought it may be inside the city now, or may be in an area under consideration.
  • Neighboring cities also use Renton-adjacent addresses. A "Renton" rental can turn out to be in Newcastle or Kent, each with its own code.

Verify the parcel, not the ZIP code.

King County Landlord Tenant Laws: What Applies in Unincorporated Areas

In 2021, the King County Council adopted Ordinance 19311, a tenant protections package for unincorporated King County, now codified in King County Code chapters 12.20 and 12.25.

If your rental sits in Fairwood, East Renton Highlands, Skyway/West Hill, or another unincorporated pocket, these county rules apply on top of state law:

  • Move-in costs capped: security deposits and move-in fees cannot exceed one month's rent (income-based housing excepted). Tenants may pay in installments: six equal monthly payments on leases of six months or longer, or two installments over the first two months for month-to-month or shorter tenancies.
  • Late fees capped: late fees cannot exceed 1.5 percent of monthly rent.
  • Extra rent increase notice: increases above 3 percent require 120 days' written notice, longer than the statewide 90-day minimum. The bigger notice window controls, so build it into your renewal calendar.
  • Screening limits: you may request a Social Security number but cannot require one; you must accept alternatives such as previous names and addresses, personal references, and work history, and you must disclose your criteria and the consumer reporting agency you use.
  • Just cause protections: the county maintains its own just cause framework alongside the statewide one in RCW 59.18.650, with longer notice for certain grounds, such as 90 days for an owner or immediate family move-in and 120 days for demolition, substantial rehabilitation, or condominium conversion.

The original assumption many owners (and more than a few online guides) make is that these rules reach into Renton because the county surrounds the city. They do not. The county adopted them under its authority over unincorporated areas, and the county's own materials say so explicitly.

What the City of Renton Requires Inside City Limits

Inside the city, the operative local rules come from the Renton Municipal Code, and they focus on registration and licensing rather than new tenancy terms.

Rental Registration and Inspection Program (RMC 4-5-125). Adopted in 2019 and updated in 2021, the program requires at least one landlord of each rental dwelling unit to register with the city annually, on or before January 31.

Registration includes:

  • The landlord's name and contact information, plus any designated representative or property manager;
  • A residential rental checklist for each rental property, a self-certification that every unit complies with the habitability obligations in RCW 59.18.060 and presents no health or safety hazards;
  • Payment of the registration fee in the city's current fee schedule;
  • Optional enrollment in the police department's landlord notification program for notice of police activity at your property.

Routine third-party inspections are not required. The city can order a certificate of inspection from a qualified inspector (a licensed home inspector, structural engineer, architect, or similar; you cannot inspect your own unit) when a tenant requests one and the city finds reason to believe a violation exists, when the city observes a likely violation, or as part of a code enforcement order. Exemptions include rooms rented inside a landlord-occupied home, short-term and transient lodging, state-licensed care facilities, government-owned housing, and shelters.

Business license. Renton's business license chapter (RMC 5-5) defines "engaging in business" broadly, but the city's rental registration program FAQ states that landlords, including apartment owners, are not currently required to hold a city business license. Property management companies operating in the city and short-term rentals do need one. Because the code text and current administrative practice read differently, confirm with the city if your situation is unusual.

What Renton does not have. We checked the Renton Municipal Code for local rent increase notice tiers, move-in cost or deposit caps, and city-specific just cause or source of income rules beyond state law, and found none as of this writing. The registration ordinance enforces the state habitability standard rather than creating new tenant protections.

That makes Renton lighter-touch than Seattle, Burien, or unincorporated King County on tenancy terms, but the registration and licensing obligations are real, and they carry code enforcement penalties if ignored.

The Statewide 2026 Baseline That Applies Everywhere

Whichever side of the line your parcel sits on, Washington law sets the floor. This is the stack every Renton-area owner should have in their renewal and leasing process:

  • Rent increase notice: minimum 90 days' written notice for any increase (RCW 59.18.140), 30 days for income-based subsidized tenancies, effective only at the end of the lease term. Remember the 120-day county overlay for increases above 3 percent in unincorporated areas.
  • Rent cap: under RCW 59.18.700, no increase during the first 12 months of a tenancy, and increases within any 12-month period are capped at 7 percent plus Seattle-area CPI or 10 percent, whichever is less. The Department of Commerce publishes the exact annual maximum. The cap resets between tenancies, and exemptions exist (RCW 59.18.710) for newer buildings and certain owner-occupied situations, though not for corporate-owned properties.
  • Security deposits: refund or an itemized statement with supporting documentation within 30 days of move-out (RCW 59.18.280). No deductions for ordinary wear and tear or for items missing from the move-in checklist.
  • Screening: written notice of criteria and process before screening, and a written adverse action notice in the statutory format (RCW 59.18.257). Source of income is protected statewide (RCW 59.18.255); subtract any subsidy before applying an income ratio.

Our guides to Washington lease compliance and tenant screening in Washington State cover this baseline in depth.

A Quick Decision Path for Renton Area Owners

Run each property through this once, and recheck after any annexation news:

  • Step 1: Look up the parcel in the King County Parcel Viewer and read the jurisdiction field.
  • Step 2, if city of Renton: register with the city's rental program by January 31 each year, file the rental checklist, and follow the statewide baseline for all tenancy terms.
  • Step 3, if unincorporated King County: no Renton registration applies; instead, apply the county overlay: one-month move-in cap with installments, 1.5 percent late fee cap, 120 days' notice for increases over 3 percent, and the county screening and just cause rules.
  • Step 4, if another city: check that city's municipal code directly. As we learned in nearby cities, "no local rules" is an assumption worth verifying, never defaulting to.
  • Step 5, everywhere: the statewide rent cap, 90-day notice, deposit documentation, and screening rules apply regardless.

How Sagareus Handles Local Registration and Licensing

Register and license every property with its city, keep it renewed, and pass the required inspections, so you never have to track which city requires what. Across the Puget Sound, the rules change at every city line. What we do for each property we manage:

  • Register the property with its city. Many cities, including Seattle, Renton, Kent, Tukwila, Kirkland, and Burien, require a rental registration or business license to operate a property as rental housing, and the rules vary by city.
  • Keep it current. Some cities renew every year, others every two; we track each expiration and renew on time, so a registration never lapses on your watch.
  • Handle the required inspections. Where a city mandates periodic inspection, we coordinate a licensed inspector, schedule access with respect for your residents, and see any required repairs through to sign-off.

You pay the city's fees; we handle the tracking, filing, and follow-up, so the registration never lapses on your watch.

This is the invisible compliance work that quietly catches self-managing owners off guard, and exactly where local expertise pays for itself.

Our Renton property management team verifies jurisdiction at the parcel level during onboarding, and routine property inspections keep every unit ahead of the habitability standard the city's checklist certifies.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does King County code apply inside Renton city limits?

No. King County's tenant protections ordinance (Ordinance 19311, codified in KCC chapters 12.20 and 12.25) applies in unincorporated King County only. Inside Renton city limits, the Renton Municipal Code and Washington state law govern. County rules reach Renton-addressed rentals only when the parcel itself is unincorporated, as in Fairwood, East Renton Highlands, or Skyway/West Hill.

How do I find out whether my rental is in unincorporated King County?

Search the address or parcel number in the King County Parcel Viewer and read the jurisdiction field, or use the interactive coverage map on the county's tenant protections page. The mailing address is not reliable; "Renton, WA" addresses extend well beyond city limits.

Do I have to register my rental with the City of Renton?

Yes, if the unit is inside city limits and not exempt. RMC 4-5-125 requires annual registration by January 31, including a self-certified checklist confirming each unit meets the state habitability standard. Owner-occupied room rentals, short-term lodging, licensed care facilities, government housing, and shelters are exempt. Landlords are not currently required to hold a separate city business license per the city's program FAQ; property management companies and short-term rentals are.

Does Washington's rent cap apply in both the city and unincorporated areas?

Yes. The statewide cap under RCW 59.18.700, along with the 90-day increase notice, deposit rules, and screening requirements, applies everywhere in Washington. Local rules can add requirements, such as the county's 120-day notice for increases above 3 percent, but nothing local removes the state floor.

This article is general information, not legal advice. For questions about a specific property or dispute, consult a landlord-tenant attorney.

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