Tenant Rights in Louth
Everything you need to know about renting in Louth under the 2026 reforms. Rent caps, notice periods, eviction rules, and your rights as a tenant.
Check your rent increase
Is your Louth landlord overcharging?
Calculate notice period
How much notice are you owed?
Check your deposit
Know what you're entitled to
The 2% rent cap in Louth
Since 1 March 2026, every residential tenancy in Louth — and all of Ireland — is subject to a maximum annual rent increase of 2%. This replaces the old Rent Pressure Zone system. It doesn’t matter whether your property was previously in an RPZ or not — the 2% cap now applies everywhere.
Your landlord must give you at least 90 days’ written notice before any increase takes effect. The notice must state the new rent, the date it takes effect, and your right to dispute it with the RTB. If any of this is missing, the increase is invalid.
Notice periods for tenants in Louth
| Tenancy length | Landlord must give | Tenant must give |
|---|---|---|
| Under 6 months | 28 days | 28 days |
| 6 months – 1 year | 90 days | 28 days |
| 1 – 3 years | 120 days | 56 days |
| 3 – 7 years | 180 days | 84 days |
| 7 – 8 years | 196 days | 84 days |
| 8+ years | 224 days | 112 days |
Eviction protections in Louth
Under the 2026 Tenancy of Minimum Duration (TMD) rules, all tenancies in Louth have a minimum duration of 6 years. Your landlord cannot end your tenancy without a valid legal reason, even within the first 6 months.
Valid grounds for ending a tenancy include: the landlord selling the property, needing it for a family member, significant renovation requiring vacant possession, or a substantial breach of tenant obligations. “I want to increase the rent” is not a valid reason.
Your landlord’s obligations in Louth
- Register the tenancy with the RTB
- Provide a rent book or statement of rent paid
- Maintain the property to minimum standards
- Give proper written notice for any rent increase
- Return your deposit promptly at end of tenancy
- Not discriminate on grounds of gender, race, family status, etc.
- Ensure the property has a valid BER certificate
- Provide minimum 24 hours' notice before entering the property
Rental rights by town in Louth
Think your landlord in Louth is breaking the rules?
Check your rent increase for free, or use our Pro tools to generate a legal letter and build an RTB case.
Disclaimer: This page provides general information about tenant rights in Louth under the Residential Tenancies Act 2004 (as amended) and the 2026 reforms. It is not legal advice. For complex situations, contact Threshold or speak to a solicitor.