How to break a lease early in Connecticut
What Connecticut law says about ending a lease early, your security deposit, and the fees — grounded in the state's own statutes.
By the Contract Offramp legal-research team · Grounded in primary Connecticut statutes · Updated July 2, 2026 · 4 min read
If you need to get out of a residential lease early in Connecticut, state law gives tenants specific protections — and some clauses landlords rely on aren't enforceable. This guide covers what Connecticut law says about ending a lease early, your deposit, and the fees you might face, grounded in the state's own statutes.
What Connecticut law says about leaving a lease
These are the Connecticut provisions most relevant to ending a lease early, summarized from the state code. Your exact rights depend on your lease and your facts, so treat this as a map, not a verdict.
Terms prohibited in rental agreement — A rental agreement may not require a tenant to waive statutory rights, authorize confession of judgment, limit landlord liability, waive security-deposit interest, allow dispossession without court order, or pay prohibited fees. Prohibited provisions are unenforceable. (Conn. Gen. Stat. § 47a-4)
The rules most leases share, wherever you are
- Your landlord usually has to limit their losses. In most states a landlord cannot let the unit sit empty and bill you for the entire remaining lease — they must make reasonable efforts to re-rent. Confirm how Connecticut applies this before you rely on it.
- A penalty-style early-termination fee is often unenforceable. To hold up, a fee generally has to be a genuine estimate of the landlord's actual loss, not a punishment for leaving.
- Some protections can't be signed away. Core rights like habitability and access to legal remedies typically survive even when a lease says otherwise.
How to read your specific lease
The statutes above are the backdrop; what matters is what your lease actually says. A free Contract Offramp check scans your document for the issues that matter for leaving early — penalty fees, waived habitability rights, illegal clauses — and quotes them back with citations. It's a starting point for a licensed Connecticut attorney, not a substitute for one.
This article is general legal information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Statutes change and every situation is different — verify the current statute text at the linked sources and consult a licensed Connecticut attorney before acting.
Frequently asked questions
Can I break my lease in Connecticut without penalty?
Sometimes. Most states recognize grounds to end a lease early with little or no penalty — an uninhabitable unit, landlord harassment, documented domestic violence, or active military service. Outside those, you can still leave, but you may owe rent until the unit is re-rented. Check the Connecticut statutes above and confirm your situation with a licensed attorney.
Does my Connecticut landlord have to find a new tenant?
In most states a landlord cannot simply let the unit sit empty and bill you for the rest of the lease — they must make reasonable efforts to re-rent and limit their losses, so your liability is usually the rent lost during the reasonable time it takes to find a replacement. Confirm how Connecticut applies this rule.
How much of my deposit can a Connecticut landlord keep?
State law typically caps deposits and sets a deadline to return them with an itemized statement of any deductions. See the deposit statute in the list above for Connecticut's specific limit and timeline, and remember recent legislation can change the cap.
Is an early-termination fee legal in Connecticut?
Not automatically. A fee generally has to reflect the landlord's real loss rather than act as a penalty, and it is read alongside the landlord's duty to limit losses by re-renting. Have the exact clause reviewed against current Connecticut law.