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The Legal Side of Rating Your Landlord: What You Can and Can't Say
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The Legal Side of Rating Your Landlord: What You Can and Can't Say

A plain-English guide to defamation, opinion, and protected speech for tenants writing landlord reviews. Real examples of what holds up in court and what doesn't.

JMLJudge My Landlord Team23 Mei 20264 min read61 views

You shouldn't need a law degree to leave a review. But knowing five legal concepts — defamation, opinion, fair comment, malice, and anti-SLAPP — covers about 95% of the situations renters worry about.

This is the plain-English version. None of this is legal advice for a specific case, but it should be enough to write a confident, honest review without lying awake worrying.

Defamation, in one paragraph

Defamation is when you make a false factual statement, presented as fact, that hurts someone's reputation. All three pieces matter. False = it's not true. Factual = it could be proven or disproven. Hurts reputation = it's the kind of thing that would make others think worse of them. Miss any one piece and there's no case.

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Truth is an absolute defense. If what you wrote is true and you can show evidence, defamation literally doesn't apply. Period.

Opinion vs. fact: the most important distinction

Opinions are protected speech. Facts can be tested for truth. The trick is that the line isn't always obvious. Some examples:

  • "My landlord is the worst person I've dealt with" → opinion. Protected.
  • "My landlord embezzled deposits from every tenant" → factual claim. Must be provable.
  • "It felt like the apartment was unsafe" → opinion. Protected.
  • "The smoke detector didn't work" → factual claim. Must be true (and ideally documented).
  • "He's a slumlord" → courts have ruled both ways. Use sparingly.

When in doubt: rewrite the sentence to start with "I think," "I felt," or "in my opinion." It instantly shifts most statements into protected-opinion territory.

Fair comment: criticism of how someone does business

Most jurisdictions recognize "fair comment" — the right to criticize how a business operates, including how a landlord runs their rental. Reviewing your landlord is fair comment by default, the same way reviewing a restaurant or a contractor is. This is why landlords almost always lose these cases.

Malice: the bar most cases never clear

Even if you got a fact technically wrong, you usually still win — as long as you genuinely believed it when you wrote it. The legal term is "actual malice," which means knowing something is false (or being reckless about whether it's true) before publishing it.

If you reasonably believed the heat was broken for 11 days and it turns out the landlord can prove it was 9, that mistake isn't malice. It's a good-faith error and you're protected. Malice is reserved for stuff like making things up on purpose.

Anti-SLAPP: your nuclear option if they sue anyway

If a landlord sues you over an honest review, most US states let you file an anti-SLAPP motion. The judge does an early review of whether the lawsuit has any merit. If it doesn't, the case is dismissed AND the landlord usually has to pay your legal fees. States with strong anti-SLAPP laws include:

  • California — strong, well-tested
  • Texas — strong (Texas Citizens Participation Act)
  • Washington, Oregon, Nevada — strong
  • New York, Florida — strong (recent updates)
  • Most other states — varying levels of protection

A pre-publish checklist

  1. Is every factual claim something I personally witnessed or can document?
  2. Have I used "I think / I felt / in my opinion" for anything subjective?
  3. Have I accused the landlord of any specific crime? If so, do I have proof a court would accept?
  4. Have I left out any other tenant's name or personal info?
  5. Have I waited at least 24 hours since I was angry?

Six 'yes' answers means you're in the safe column. If any of those is a 'no', revise that part before submitting.


Honest reviews are protected, valuable, and how the rental market gets more transparent. Don't let fear of a landlord lawsuit silence a review that future renters need — just write it the way the law expects: specific, documented, and grounded in what you actually experienced.

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