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Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act took effect on January 1, 2026, and it changes how long rental licenses last, what happens when a property is sold, and how the City identifies high violation buildings for additional inspections.
This guide is written for real world landlords and property managers. It is not legal advice, but it is a practical roadmap so you can avoid surprises, keep your license active, and protect your timeline.
If you are looking for the inspection checklist itself, start here.
The Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act takes effect January 1, 2026 and does four big things.
First, it replaces the old tiered system and makes rental licenses a flat two year term.
Second, rental licenses can no longer be transferred, and a new owner must apply for a new rental license within 60 days of taking ownership or operating the property.
Third, the City must identify certain large buildings as priority dwellings, and selected high violation properties will be required to undergo priority inspections at least twice per year, spaced at least four months apart.
Fourth, posting and disclosure rules matter more than ever, including using the rental license number in ads and providing the license to tenants at lease and renewal.
Baltimore City created the Act to focus enforcement on multifamily buildings that show repeated and recurring health and habitability issues. DHCD is required to identify properties that meet the criteria of a priority dwelling and then select the high violation properties that must undergo a series of priority inspections.
DHCD explains that priority dwelling criteria generally applies to rental dwellings with 20 or more units and looks at factors like violations that remain unabated, multiple violation notices, a high number of 311 calls related to health and habitability, and low HUD inspection scores. Backlink: Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act page
This matters because the priority inspection program can lead to stronger consequences, including denial, suspension, or revocation of a rental license based on findings.
If you have been used to different license terms based on property type or history, that is gone. Under the Act, the tiered system is removed and replaced with a flat two year term for all rental licenses. Backlink: Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act page
What to do now:
This is a big one. If a rental property changes hands, the license does not move to the new owner. A person must apply for a new rental license within 60 days of assuming record ownership or operation of a rental dwelling. Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on transfer of license prohibited
What to do now:
Priority inspections are not optional. The law requires at least two priority inspections each calendar year, at least four months apart, and the inspection window is between February and November. The City also sets the minimum number of priority dwellings that must receive priority inspections each year. Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on priority inspections
What to do now:
Baltimore City requires license visibility and sharing in multiple places, not just a file folder in your office.
The Code requires the license to be prominently displayed, and it also requires the license to be provided to tenants at key moments like when a lease is offered, executed, or renewed. Advertising materials for covered rentals must include the rental license number, and you cannot advertise with an expired, suspended, or revoked number. Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on posting license and license number
DHCD also states failure to post a rental license is a 250 dollar citation, and the Act includes public notice requirements in certain situations. Backlink: Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act page
What to do now:
Baltimore City requires a currently effective rental license to rent or offer to rent covered dwellings. If you are collecting rent without a required license, you are in a risky spot fast. Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on license required
Priority dwelling status generally focuses on larger properties, and the priority inspection process is built around inspecting a percentage of units in those buildings. Backlink: Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act page
Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on priority inspections
If you manage a large building, the most important thing is not arguing with the program. It is preventing the conditions that trigger enforcement in the first place.
If you want the exact checklist used for the licensing inspection, read: Baltimore City Rental License Inspection Checklist.
If DHCD identifies your property as a priority dwelling, the City must notify the record owner and any managing operator. Priority inspections must occur at least twice per year and notice of inspections must be posted by the owner or manager. Backlink: Strengthening Renters’ Safety Act page
Backlink: Baltimore City Code section on priority inspections
DHCD also states that owners and managers of selected high violation properties will be required to attend individual meetings at DHCD headquarters.
That means your best strategy is to be ready before you ever receive that notice:
Keep resident notices consistent and documented.
DHCD states the Act takes effect on January 1, 2026.
DHCD states the Act replaces the tiered system with a flat two year term for all rental licenses.
No. Baltimore City Code prohibits transferring a rental license and requires a new license application within 60 days of taking ownership or operating the property.
Yes. Baltimore City Code requires advertising materials for covered rentals to include the rental license number, and it restricts use of expired, suspended, or revoked numbers.
The law requires at least two priority inspections per year, at least four months apart, and between February and November.
Baltimore City Code requires inspection reports used for licensing to be distributed to each resident at the time the application is submitted.
DHCD states failure to post a rental license is a 250 dollar citation.
If you want to keep your rental licensing process smooth, it starts with a clean inspection, clean documentation, and good timing.
We serve Baltimore City and surrounding areas, and we help landlords and managers keep the process straightforward.