Death, biohazard, and meth contamination disclosure rules for North Carolina real estate and rentals — for sellers, buyers, and landlords.
North Carolina statute provides that a death or serious illness on the property is not a material fact. The statute uses the general term "died" without distinguishing manner of death. Sellers may not knowingly make false statements.
Statute: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 39-50
Remedy standard: Fraud or misrepresentation only. Stigma-only claims are generally barred in North Carolina, but sellers must answer truthfully if asked in writing — lies in response to a direct question are actionable fraud in every state.
Death disclosure to tenants: Not required. Biohazard/meth disclosure: Required as a habitability matter. Bedbug disclosure: Not required by state law. Federal lead paint disclosure applies to pre-1978 housing in all states.
North Carolina requires decontamination of properties used for meth manufacturing under § 130A-284. The state guideline threshold is 0.1 µg/100 cm². However, sellers can opt out of affirmative disclosure via "no representation" on the disclosure form.