Nevada 1-Page Residential Lease Agreement

The Nevada 1-page residential lease agreement legal form provides safeguards for the Property Owners, Landlords and Tenants. Free basic fill-in-the-blanks agreement documents available in Google Documents, Word Processing, PDF formats and more. Download by clicking on the buttons below. Learn more on what to include in the agreement form by reading the information provided below.

Last updated April 9th, 2024

The Nevada 1-page residential lease agreement legal form provides safeguards for the Property Owners, Landlords and Tenants. Free basic fill-in-the-blanks agreement documents available in Google Documents, Word Processing, PDF formats and more. Download by clicking on the buttons below. Learn more on what to include in the agreement form by reading the information provided below.

  1. Home »
  2. Lease »
  3. Simple-1-Page »
  4. Nevada

A Nevada residential lease agreement includes the terms and conditions for rental property. This form must be signed by the Landlord and Tenant.

Rental Application – Before authorizing an agreement, a landlord often uses a rental agreement that checks the tenant’s credit report and income to ensure they are suitable renters.

Options By Type

Standard Residential Lease Agreement

Download: PDF

Simple (1-Page) Lease Agreement

 

Download: PDF

Most Recent US Home Facts

  • Population (2023): 334,914,895
  • Median Households (2022): 125,736,353
  • Median Household Income (2022): $75,149
  • Owner-occupied Households (2022): 64.8%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Disclosures

  1. Foreclosure
  2. Inventory and Condition of Premises
  3. Lead-Based Paint Disclosure

Security Deposit

Maximum Amount – The maximum amount of rent Landlords can charge Tenants is equal to the total amount of three (3) months’ rent.

Returning to Tenant – Landlords must returned all deposits to Tenants within thirty (30) days of the lease end date.

Source: § 118A.242(1)

Landlord Access

General Access – A 24-hour notice is required by Nevada state law.

Emergency Access – Landlords can access the rental units in an emergency and do not need to give prior notice to Tenants.

Source: § 118A.330(3)

Paying Rent

Grace Period – 3-day Grace Period.

Maximum Late Fee – The maximum fee Landlords can charge for late rent is five (5) percent of the monthly rent amount.

Notice for Rent Increases – For leases under thirty (30) days, a 30 day notice is required by Landlords. For all other lease types, a 60 day notice is required.

Source: § 118A.300

Nevada Lease Agreement Form Sample

Nevada Simple 1 Page Residential Lease Agreement