Rent Withholding Escrow Calculator
Estimate the total amount to deposit into a rent escrow account when withholding rent due to landlord's failure to maintain habitable conditions. Calculates cumulative withheld rent, accrued interest, and estimated legal costs.
Courts may allow 25–100% depending on severity of conditions.
Use your state's legal escrow or savings rate. Default ~4–5% if unknown.
Cost to fix the habitability issue. Used to assess escrow adequacy.
Typical tenant attorney fees range 10–25% of disputed amount.
Formulas Used
Monthly Withheld Amount:
W = MonthlyRent × (WithholdPct ÷ 100)
Total Principal Withheld:
P = W × N (N = number of months)
Escrow Future Value (Ordinary Annuity — monthly compounding):
FV = W × [((1 + r)N − 1) ÷ r] where r = AnnualRate ÷ 12 ÷ 100
If r = 0: FV = W × N
Total Interest Earned:
I = FV − P
Estimated Legal Fees:
LF = P × (LegalFeePct ÷ 100)
Total Escrow Needed:
Total = FV + LF
Assumptions & References
- Rent withholding (rent escrow) is a legal remedy available in most U.S. states when a landlord fails to maintain habitable conditions under the implied warranty of habitability (established in Javins v. First National Realty Corp., 428 F.2d 1071, D.C. Cir. 1970).
- Tenants must typically provide written notice to the landlord and allow a reasonable repair period (commonly 14–30 days) before withholding rent.
- Withheld rent must be deposited into a court-approved or third-party escrow account — tenants cannot simply keep the money.
- The withholding percentage (25–100%) is determined by the court based on the severity of the habitability violation and the diminished rental value.
- Interest is calculated as a future value of an ordinary annuity, assuming each monthly deposit earns compound interest for the remaining escrow period.
- Legal fee estimates (10–25%) are typical for tenant-side attorneys in rent escrow proceedings; actual fees vary by jurisdiction and case complexity.
- States with explicit rent escrow statutes include Maryland (Md. Code, Real Prop. § 8-211), Pennsylvania (68 P.S. § 250.206), Virginia (Va. Code § 55.1-1234), and others.
- This calculator is for educational estimation only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before withholding rent.