← Back to state guides

Vermont renter guide

Vermont Security Deposit Demand Letter

If your landlord has not returned your deposit, missed the return or itemization deadline, or sent unsupported deductions, start with a documented security deposit demand letter. In Vermont, the return window renters track most often in this workflow is about 14 days (60 for seasonal) after move-out when a refund or itemized list is missing (see Quick timeline context below).

Quick timeline context

Typical return window

14 days (60 for seasonal)

Statute reference

9 V.S.A. § 4461

Why this matters

Vermont renters often protect leverage with a dated written demand once the 14-day return window passes or itemized accounting never arrives.

Skip ahead: build your letter →

Common renter scenarios

  • No refund or itemized deductions after move-out
  • Cleaning or repair charges without invoices or receipts
  • Landlord stops responding to texts or email about the deposit
  • Dispute over normal wear versus chargeable damage

Real case patterns

Anonymized examples to show how timeline-based demand letters are typically used before escalation.

Case examples for Vermont are being expanded. This section will be populated with anonymized real scenarios.

FAQ

How long does a landlord have to return a security deposit in Vermont?

Vermont generally uses about a 14-day window under 9 V.S.A. § 4461, but lease type and local rules can change details. Confirm current statutory text when you set a deadline in a demand letter.

What should I put in a first security deposit demand letter in Vermont?

Include move-out or surrender date, forwarding address, deposit amount, the statute citation, a request for full refund or itemized deductions with receipts, and a specific response deadline. Keep certified-mail or email delivery proof.

Should I send a demand letter before small claims in Vermont?

Yes. A concise dated demand creates a paper trail and often prompts payment or compliant accounting before you pay filing fees.

Deposit letter types

Each scenario below shares the same return-window context as this Vermont guide. Browse all five on one page, or jump straight into the letter that fits your situation.

All letter types overview →

Related guides

Build your letter