The New Hampshire Deposit Recovery System
A structured way to handle your deposit from move-out through final demand, without relying on one letter to do all the work.
Why this exists
Most deposit problems are not solved by writing a harsher sentence.
They usually turn on timing, documentation, condition evidence, interest, written itemization, repair evidence, coverage facts, and whether the landlord received a clear written sequence before things became adversarial.
This system puts that sequence in order for New Hampshire renters.
What this actually does
This is built for the stage before court.
It helps you:
- document move-out, possession, condition, and your forwarding address before the dispute hardens
- wait until the New Hampshire 30-day deadline actually matters
- ask for the missing refund, interest, written itemization, repair evidence, balance, or amount due
- send one clear letter at a time
- keep the remedy, deduction, coverage, and evidence issues organized if the landlord still does not comply
You can piece that together yourself using the free guides. This just saves time and keeps the order clean.
What you get
Step 1 - Move-Out Notice and Forwarding Address
Cooperative and preventive. It documents termination, possession delivery, address, condition, timing proof, and coverage facts before the dispute hardens.
Step 2 - Security Deposit Due
Firm and professional. Used after the New Hampshire 30-day deadline has passed without a proper refund, interest, written itemization, repair evidence, or amount due.
Step 3 - Security Deposit Entitlement
More assertive. It ties the missed deadline, interest issue, itemization problem, repair-evidence gap, reasonable-wear rule, deduction limits, and remedy leverage together clearly.
Step 4 - Final Demand Before Legal Action
Final and direct. It gives one last written chance to resolve the deposit before deciding whether to file a small claim.
Why Step 1 matters
Step 1 is not filler.
New Hampshire disputes can turn on the tenancy termination date, possession, condition evidence, the response address, interest, written itemization, repair evidence, and whether the rental is covered by the special deposit rules.
Step 1 helps make those facts easier to prove before the landlord decides what to do with your deposit.
How people typically use this
- Start at the step that matches your situation
- Send one letter at a time
- Wait and track responses
- Move forward only if needed
It is not about doing everything at once. It is about keeping timing, completeness, and tone under control.
TL;DR
The free guides are enough if you want to build the process yourself.
The paid system is the convenience layer: four New Hampshire-specific documents in the right order, written to match the stage you are in. The value is the sequence, timing, documentation, and showing the landlord you know the New Hampshire process.
A clear New Hampshire sequence for the 30-day deadline, interest issue, itemization problem, repair-evidence gap, deduction challenge, and final demand before escalation.
Get the Deposit Recovery SystemImportant: This is general information and not legal advice.