Can my landlord raise the rent more than once a year in Ireland?
The short answer
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How often a landlord can review rent
Irish law is clear on this. A landlord may only review the rent on a tenancy once every twelve months. This rule applies to almost all private residential tenancies registered with the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB).
This means if your rent was last reviewed in March 2026, your landlord cannot review it again until at least March 2027. It does not matter whether the previous review resulted in an increase, a decrease, or no change at all — the 12-month clock starts ticking from the date of the review.
The rule applies whether you have a fixed-term lease, a Part 4 tenancy, or are renting on a periodic (rolling) basis. The only narrow exceptions involve substantial works to the property, which we cover below.
Worth knowing
The 12-month rule applies to reviews, not just increases. A landlord cannot dodge the rule by labelling something a “rent adjustment” or “market correction” — any change to the rent counts as a review.
The 90-day notice rule
Even when a review is permitted, a landlord cannot increase the rent on the spot. They must serve you with a valid Notice of Rent Review at least 90 days before the new rent takes effect.
For the notice to be valid, it must:
- Be in writing and use the prescribed RTB form
- State the proposed new rent
- State the date the new rent takes effect (at least 90 days after notice)
- Confirm that the new rent is not in excess of market rent
- Provide three examples of comparable properties in the local area
- Include the standard RTB statutory information sheet
If any of these elements are missing, the notice is invalid and the rent increase cannot take effect. You are not obliged to pay the increased amount until a valid notice has been served and 90 days have passed.
Rent Pressure Zones
If your rental property is in a Rent Pressure Zone (RPZ), an additional cap applies. Most of Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick, and many commuter towns are designated RPZs.
The current RPZ caps for 2026 are summarised below:
| Tenancy type | Maximum increase | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| RPZ — standard tenancy | 2% per year, or HICP rate, whichever is lower | Once every 12 months |
| RPZ — first-time letting | Subject to market rent assessment | N/A (initial rent setting) |
| Outside RPZ | No statutory cap (must be market rent) | Once every 12 months |
| Substantial works exception | Reset of rent permitted | After major refurbishment |
You can check whether your property is in an RPZ using the RTB’s online RPZ checker. If it is, and your landlord proposes an increase above the cap, the increase is unlawful regardless of whether the notice itself is valid.
What if your landlord ignores the rules?
If your landlord serves an invalid notice, ignores the 12-month rule, or proposes an increase above the RPZ cap, you have several routes available:
1. Refer the dispute to the RTB
The Residential Tenancies Board adjudicates rent disputes for free. You can apply for an Adjudication or Mediation through the RTB’s online dispute resolution service. Most rent disputes are resolved within 8–12 weeks.
2. Continue paying the existing rent
You are not legally required to pay any increase that arises from an invalid notice. Continue paying your existing rent on time. Keep written evidence (bank transfers, signed receipts) of every payment.
Important
Do not stop paying rent — only refuse to pay the increase. Stopping payment entirely could expose you to a separate legal action for arrears.
3. Seek written confirmation from your landlord
Write to your landlord, ideally by registered post or email with read receipts, stating the basis on which you believe the notice is invalid. Many disputes are resolved at this stage when the landlord realises their notice doesn’t meet the statutory requirements.
Steps to take if it happens to you
- Check the date of your last rent review — was it less than 12 months ago?
- Check the notice itself — does it use the prescribed RTB form and contain all required information?
- Check whether your property is in an RPZ — and whether the increase exceeds the cap.
- Keep all correspondence — notices, emails, texts, and rent receipts.
- Reply in writing stating your position calmly and citing the relevant law.
- Apply to the RTB for dispute resolution if your landlord won’t withdraw the notice.
- Talk to a solicitor if the situation escalates or your tenancy is at risk.
Frequently asked questions
What if my lease says the rent will increase every six months?
A clause in a lease cannot override the statutory 12-month rule. Any clause to the contrary is unenforceable. The Residential Tenancies Act takes precedence over the lease terms.
Does the 12-month rule apply to new tenancies?
The first rent set at the start of a tenancy is the initial rent — not a review. The 12-month clock starts from that date. Subsequent reviews must follow the 12-month and 90-day rules.
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About the reviewing solicitor
Sarah Ryan, BL
Ryan & Associates
Law Society of Ireland · Reg. 12345
Sarah Ryan is a barrister specializing in residential tenancy law and property disputes. Based in Galway, she has 12 years of experience representing tenants and landlords before the RTB and Irish courts. She has appeared on RTÉ Radio One discussing rental rights and contributes regularly to the Galway Bay FM legal hour.
Important: This article is provided for information only and does not constitute legal advice. For your specific situation, please consult a qualified solicitor. Information on Legals.ie is reviewed regularly but the law can change — verify any time-critical details with a current solicitor before acting.