Getting a notice that your landlord is selling the building ranks somewhere between mildly stressful and genuinely alarming, depending on your situation. Most renters don’t know what it means for their lease, their security deposit, or whether they’ll still have a home in six months.
The good news is that tenants have more protection than they often realize. The less good news is that some of those protections depend on how the sale is structured. When a building changes hands through a seller-financed deal, for example, the original owner may remain connected to the property through a promissory note even after closing. Companies like Amerinote Xchange operate in that space, purchasing notes from sellers who no longer want to hold the financing. Understanding these structures helps renters ask the right questions when a sale is announced.
Your Lease Doesn’t Disappear When the Building Sells
This is the part most renters get wrong. A signed lease is a binding contract that survives a change of ownership. The new owner takes the property subject to existing leases, which means they’re legally obligated to honor the terms you agreed to with the previous landlord.
That includes your rent amount, your lease end date, any included utilities, pet agreements, parking arrangements, and anything else written into the contract. The new owner can’t show up after closing and demand a rent increase or give you 30 days to leave just because they’re the new landlord.
Month-to-Month Tenants Are in a Different Position
If you’re on a month-to-month agreement rather than a fixed-term lease, your situation is less certain. Month-to-month tenancies can generally be terminated with proper notice, and a new owner may choose to do exactly that if they want to renovate, reposition the building, or move in themselves.
Notice requirements vary by state and sometimes by city. In many places, 30 to 60 days written notice is required. Some jurisdictions require longer notice periods or have just-cause eviction protections that limit a new owner’s ability to remove tenants simply for purchasing the property. Know your local rules.
What Happens to Your Security Deposit
Security deposits follow the tenancy, not the seller. When a building sells, the seller is required to transfer your security deposit to the new owner, or return it to you directly. Either way, you don’t lose it simply because the property changed hands.
Get written confirmation of who holds your deposit after the sale closes. If the new owner claims they never received it and the previous landlord is unresponsive, you may need to pursue it through small claims court. Having documentation of your original payment is essential.
The Sale Process and What to Expect
Most building sales take 30 to 90 days from the time a contract is signed to the time it closes. During that period, you may see activity you haven’t seen before: inspectors walking the building, appraisers photographing units, or prospective buyers touring the property.
Landlords are generally required to give reasonable advance notice before entering your unit for inspections, typically 24 to 48 hours depending on state law. If access requests feel excessive or your landlord is entering without notice, that’s worth addressing directly in writing.
When a New Owner Wants You Out
There are legitimate situations where a new owner can end your tenancy. If your fixed-term lease expires after the sale, they’re under no obligation to renew it. In some states, owner move-in rules allow new owners to terminate a tenancy if they or an immediate family member intends to occupy the unit, though this varies significantly by jurisdiction and often requires relocation assistance.
What a new owner cannot do is evict you without cause while a valid lease is in effect, refuse to return your security deposit without legal grounds, or change the locks or remove amenities to force you out. Those actions are illegal regardless of who owns the building.
Questions Worth Asking Before and After the Sale
- Will the new owner honor the terms of my current lease in writing?
- Who holds my security deposit after closing, and can I get written confirmation?
- Will management responsibilities change, and who should I contact for repairs?
- Is there a new lease renewal process, and will my rent increase at renewal?
You’re entitled to ask these questions. A new owner who refuses to answer them in writing is a yellow flag worth paying attention to before you sign anything new.
The Bottom Line
A building sale is unsettling but not automatically a threat to your tenancy. Fixed-term leases give you the strongest protection. Month-to-month tenants should understand their local notice requirements and just-cause rules. And regardless of your lease type, document everything, get confirmations in writing, and know who holds your deposit.
Most ownership transitions are straightforward. The ones that aren’t are usually manageable if you know your rights before the process starts.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
No. A valid lease typically remains in effect after the sale, and the new owner must honor its terms until it expires.
Not if you are under a fixed-term lease. Rent changes generally can only occur according to the terms of your existing agreement.
The security deposit should either be transferred to the new owner or returned to you, depending on local laws and the sale agreement.
Usually not. A new owner must follow applicable landlord-tenant laws and cannot remove tenants without proper legal grounds.
Yes, but protections are often more limited than those for fixed-term leases. Proper notice is generally required before ending a month-to-month tenancy.
In most cases, yes. However, landlords typically must provide advance notice before entering your unit.
Once ownership changes, the new owner or property management company should provide updated contact information for repairs and maintenance.
Generally, yes. Unless local laws provide additional protections, owners are often free to decide whether to offer a renewal after the current lease term ends.
Keep copies of your lease, rent payment records, security deposit receipts, notices, and all written communications regarding the ownership change.
