Hawaii Security Deposit Law: A 2026 Landlord's Guide

Informational overview only — not legal advice. Deposit law is state and local, and legislatures amend it frequently. Confirm the current statute (Haw. Rev. Stat. § 521-44) or consult an attorney before acting.
Maximum deposit
1 month's rent
Return deadline
14 days
Interest owed?
No*
Statute
Haw. Rev. Stat. § 521-44

How much can you charge in Hawaii?

1 month's rent. Plus an optional pet deposit (up to 1 month) for non-service animals.

Returning the deposit: the 14 days deadline

After the tenancy ends, Hawaii gives you 14 days to return the deposit. Itemized statement and receipts required. Blowing the deadline is the single most common way landlords lose deposit disputes — courts read these statutes strictly, and in many states a late or missing itemization forfeits your right to keep anything.

What you can deduct

  • Unpaid rent and other amounts the lease authorizes
  • Damage beyond normal wear and tear — holes in walls, broken fixtures, pet damage
  • Never normal wear and tear — faded paint, carpet worn by ordinary use, minor scuffs

The dispute is almost never about the rule — it's about the evidence. Date-stamped move-in and move-out photos plus an itemized statement with receipts is what wins in small-claims court.

Interest and holding requirements

Hawaii has no general statewide requirement to pay interest on residential security deposits (local ordinances can differ — check your city). Some states in this position still regulate where deposits are held; see Haw. Rev. Stat. § 521-44 for any account or disclosure rules that apply to you.

Track every deposit — and settle it correctly when the tenant leaves

LandlordPro tracks every deposit you hold, carries it across lease renewals, walks you through the return-vs-keep settlement with an itemized record, and reminds you of Hawaii's deadline. Free to start — up to 4 units.

Start tracking deposits free →

Frequently asked questions

How much can a landlord charge for a security deposit in Hawaii?

1 month's rent is the statutory maximum. See Haw. Rev. Stat. § 521-44.

How long does a Hawaii landlord have to return a security deposit?

14 days after the tenancy ends, generally with an itemized statement of any deductions. Missing the deadline can forfeit your right to deduct — and in many states triggers statutory damages.

What can a landlord deduct from a deposit in Hawaii?

Typically unpaid rent, damage beyond normal wear and tear, and other charges the lease authorizes. Normal wear and tear — faded paint, worn carpet from ordinary use — is never deductible. Documentation (move-in/move-out photos and an itemized list) is what wins disputes.

Handling Hawaii deposits with LandlordPro

LandlordPro keeps a ledger of every deposit you hold — who paid it, which lease it secures, and what happened to it. When a tenancy ends, the settlement workflow records what you returned and what you kept (with reasons), generates a tenant-facing settlement statement, and books any kept portion into your income reports correctly. Combined with the Hawaii eviction guide and move-in/move-out inspections with photos, you'll have the paper trail that deposit statutes reward.

LandlordPro is a software tool, not a law firm. This page summarizes statutes as of June 2026 for general information; amounts, deadlines, and requirements change. Verify Haw. Rev. Stat. § 521-44 or consult a licensed attorney in Hawaii before acting.