Free tool · No signup · Pre-set for Nevada

Nevada Security Deposit Return Letter

In Nevada, the deposit and an itemized statement are generally due within 30 days of tenancy ending (NRS 118A.242). Build the letter below — deductions listed line by line, refund math done, and one tap to email it so the timestamp proves you sent it on time.

From (you)
Tenancy
The money

Deductions must be itemized — vague “cleaning/repairs” lump sums are the #1 thing that loses deposit disputes. Normal wear and tear generally can't be deducted.

Deposit held$0.00
Refund to tenant$0.00

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The Nevada deadline

Nevada law provides for the deposit's return within 30 days of tenancy ending — see NRS 118A.242. Send the itemized statement on or before that deadline. Miss it, or send a vague lump sum instead of an itemized list, and many states let the tenant recover the withheld amount plus additional damages. Emailing or mailing the letter creates a dated record that you met the deadline.

Cites Nevada in the letter

The finished statement references the Nevada return deadline and citation automatically.

Itemized, with the math done

Each deduction on its own line; the refund (or balance owed) is calculated for you.

Proof you sent it on time

Email the letter and the timestamp documents delivery before the Nevada deadline.

Questions

How long does a landlord have to return a deposit in Nevada?

Generally within 30 days of tenancy ending (NRS 118A.242), together with an itemized statement of any deductions. Missing the deadline can forfeit the right to withhold. Confirm the current statute for your situation.

Do deductions have to be itemized?

Yes — an itemized statement listing each deduction, not a lump sum. This tool lists each on its own line and does the refund math.

Is it really free?

Yes — free, no signup. It cites the Nevada deadline, itemizes deductions, and can email the PDF so the timestamp documents timely delivery.

Other states: New Hampshire · New Jersey · New York · All states

Last reviewed July 2026. This free tool helps you prepare a deposit statement and is not legal advice. Deadlines, interest, and deduction rules vary and change — verify the current Nevada statute (NRS 118A.242) before you rely on it.