Can a Ohio tenant dispute a rent increase?
Yes, on specific legal grounds: the notice was defective (wrong form, wrong advance period, wrong effective date), the increase exceeds the applicable cap (if Ohio has one), the unit is rent-stabilized or rent-controlled under local ordinance, or the increase is retaliatory (in response to a tenant complaint, code-compliance request, or organizing). Ohio has no statewide advance notice specific to rent increases. ORC 5321.17 sets 30 days as the month-to-month termination default, treated as the default for rent changes. No state rent cap. A tenant-lawyer consultation is recommended for any disputed increase.
Source: ORC 5321.17 (30-day month-to-month termination default)
This is an informational answer based on ORC 5321.17 (30-day month-to-month termination default) as of early 2026. It is not legal advice. Housing law changes year to year and local ordinances (especially in rent-controlled or rent-stabilized cities) can override or add to state law. For contested cases, consult a Ohio-licensed attorney.