Your partner's moving in next month. Or maybe you need a roommate to split costs. Whatever the situation, you're probably wondering: can my landlord just say no?
Here's the reality—yes, landlords can refuse to add someone to your lease. But they can't do it for any old reason they dream up. There are specific rules about when they're allowed to reject your request and when they're crossing legal lines.
Think of it this way: your landlord ran background checks, verified your income, and checked your rental history before signing you up. They get to do the same thing when you want to add another person. That's their property, and they've got legitimate concerns about who lives there.
But here's where it gets interesting. Fair housing laws, local regulations, and even the specifics in your rental agreement all create guardrails. Your landlord can't refuse based on discriminatory reasons. They can't make up arbitrary standards. And in some situations—like when you get married—they have way less wiggle room to say no.
Adding someone to your lease means they become a full co-tenant with equal legal obligations. They're on the hook for rent, damages, and following every rule in that agreement. That's different from just having a guest crash on your couch or an unauthorized occupant living there under the radar (which, by the way, can get you evicted).
Getting a spouse added? Different ballgame than bringing in a college buddy. Each scenario plays by slightly different rules.