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District of Columbia Property Disclosure Laws

Death, biohazard, and meth contamination disclosure rules for District of Columbia real estate and rentals — for sellers, buyers, and landlords.

Death disclosure
Not required
Time window
N/A
Meth disclosure
Not required
Suicide addressed in statute
No
Stigma safe harbor
No
Primary statute
D.C. Code § 42-1301 et seq.
This entry is an initial draft from general legal knowledge. Confirm with current District of Columbia statutes and a licensed attorney before acting.

For Sellers

DC uses a residential property disclosure form focused on physical condition. Deaths and stigmas are not specifically required.

Statute: D.C. Code § 42-1301 et seq.

  1. Check your state seller disclosure form — answer every question truthfully, even if the specific event is not listed.
  2. When in doubt, disclose in writing. Nondisclosure claims are harder to defend than disclosure complaints.
  3. Consult a licensed real estate attorney in your state before listing if a biohazard event occurred on the property.

For Buyers

Remedy standard: Disclosure form requirement. District of Columbia applies broader material fact rules that may allow buyer claims for nondisclosure of stigmas with measurable impact on value.

  1. Ask the seller in writing whether any death, crime, meth activity, or biohazard event has occurred on the property.
  2. Order a professional inspection and, if suspicious, request meth residue testing or environmental screening.
  3. Search local news archives and the address on public record databases before closing.

For Landlords

Death disclosure to tenants: Not required. Biohazard/meth disclosure: Not specifically required; general habitability rules still apply. Bedbug disclosure: Required in District of Columbia. Federal lead paint disclosure applies to pre-1978 housing in all states.

  1. Review your state landlord-tenant act for disclosure obligations before advertising the unit.
  2. Keep written documentation of any remediation performed, including certificates from licensed biohazard contractors.
  3. When a prospective tenant asks about a past incident, answer truthfully — silence in response to a direct question can be actionable.

District of Columbia Disclosure FAQ

Do I have to disclose a death when selling a house in District of Columbia?
DC uses a residential property disclosure form focused on physical condition. Deaths and stigmas are not specifically required.
What is the District of Columbia statute on stigmatized property?
The governing authority is D.C. Code § 42-1301 et seq.. District of Columbia does not have a specific stigma safe harbor — material facts may still need to be disclosed.
Does District of Columbia require meth contamination disclosure?
No specific meth statute.
Do landlords in District of Columbia have to tell tenants about a past death?
Landlord death disclosure in District of Columbia: not required. General habitability rules still apply to any condition affecting health or safety.
Can a buyer sue for nondisclosure in District of Columbia?
The standard in District of Columbia is: Disclosure form requirement. Material fact nondisclosure may support a claim depending on the circumstances.

Related Resources

Biohazard cleanup cost calculator — estimate remediation cost for a property in District of Columbia before you list.
Insurance coverage guide — see which homeowner and landlord policies cover biohazard events.
District of Columbia victim compensation program — covers cleanup costs after a qualifying crime.
District of Columbia Real Estate Commission — file complaints about licensees and confirm current disclosure rules.
Not legal advice. This page summarizes general disclosure rules in District of Columbia for informational purposes. Laws change, and individual circumstances vary. Consult a licensed District of Columbia real estate attorney before relying on this information for any transaction.
Last verified: 2026-04-09 · Depth: drafted