A rent increase notice arriving from a landlord is one of the most common triggers for a tenancy dispute in Kuwait, and one of the easiest to evaluate objectively if you know what the framework actually requires. The relevant rules sit within Decree-Law No. 35 of 1978 on the lease of residential and commercial property, as amended, including the 2024 amendments under Decree-Law No. 95 of 2024 that introduced stronger tenant-facing protections.
The first question to ask when a rent increase notice arrives is not 'is this amount reasonable' but 'is a rent increase currently permitted for this tenancy at all.' The 2024 amendments introduced a rent-freeze protection running for a period — generally discussed as five years — from the start (or last amendment) of a tenancy, during which a landlord's ability to increase rent is restricted. A tenant who is still within that protected window has a materially stronger position than one whose tenancy has run past it.
Assuming an increase is not blocked by the freeze period, the next question is procedural: has the landlord given proper notice, and is that notice tied to the correct point in the lease cycle. Kuwaiti tenancy practice generally expects increases to be proposed at renewal rather than imposed mid-term, and the same notice-period logic that governs non-renewal (15 days for very short leases, one month for three-to-six-month leases, two months for leases beyond six months) is the reference point landlords and tenants should both be working from when timing a proposed change.
It is also worth checking the lease itself before assuming statutory defaults apply unmodified. Many Kuwaiti leases include their own increase mechanism — a fixed percentage cap, an index, or a requirement for mutual written agreement — and where the contract is more specific than the general statutory framework, the written terms of that specific lease are usually the first place a dispute gets resolved, not the general law in isolation.
If a tenant believes a proposed increase is improperly timed, exceeds what the lease allows, or falls within a protected rent-freeze window, the practical first step is a written response to the landlord — not simply refusing to pay a higher amount without any documented objection. A dated letter or notarised notice stating the tenant's position, ideally referencing the specific lease clause or protection being relied on, creates the record that Kuwaiti rent committees and courts expect to see if the matter escalates.
Landlords, for their part, reduce their own risk of a challenge succeeding by documenting the increase notice properly (in writing, with adequate lead time, referencing the lease's own renewal terms) rather than relying on a verbal conversation or an informal message. A rent increase that is substantively justified but procedurally sloppy is still vulnerable to challenge on the procedural ground alone.
For the fuller picture of how a rent disagreement proceeds if it isn't resolved at the notice stage, see our guide to tenant and landlord rights under Kuwait's tenancy framework in the Insights section, and if you're facing a specific increase or eviction notice, our team can review it — you can get in touch through our contact page.
A related question tenants often raise is whether a rent increase can be challenged retroactively after they have already started paying the higher amount. Continuing to pay an increased rent without formal objection can, in practice, be read as implicit acceptance of the new terms, which is precisely why sending a written objection at the time the increase is proposed — rather than paying under protest without documentation and raising the issue only much later — meaningfully strengthens a tenant's position if the matter is ever disputed.
Landlords managing multiple units sometimes apply a uniform increase policy across a portfolio without checking each individual tenancy's specific timeline and protection status. This is a common source of avoidable disputes: a rent-freeze protection or a notice-period requirement that has expired for one unit may still be running for another signed a year later, and a blanket approach that ignores those individual timelines is more likely to generate multiple simultaneous disputes than a unit-by-unit review would.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws and procedures referenced here can change, and how they apply depends on individual facts. For guidance on your specific situation, book a free intro call.
Frequently asked questions
- Can a landlord raise rent whenever they want in Kuwait?
- No. Landlords must generally time an increase to the renewal point of the lease, follow applicable notice periods, and — since the 2024 amendments — respect rent-freeze protections that restrict increases during a protected window after a tenancy begins or is last amended.
- What is the rent-freeze protection introduced in 2024?
- Decree-Law No. 95 of 2024 strengthened tenant protections by introducing a period, generally discussed as five years, during which rent increases are restricted from the start or last amendment of a tenancy.
- What should a tenant do if they receive an increase notice they believe is improper?
- Respond in writing, ideally referencing the specific lease clause or statutory protection being relied on, rather than simply refusing to pay without a documented objection. This creates the record needed if the dispute escalates to a rent committee or court.
- Does the written lease or the general law control if they conflict?
- Where a lease includes its own specific increase mechanism (a cap, index, or mutual-agreement requirement), that specific term is usually the first reference point in a dispute, alongside the statutory framework, rather than the general law alone.