Lease Agreement Comparison Tool - Compare Lease Versions

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Our lease agreement comparison tool compares two versions of a residential or commercial lease side-by-side, highlighting every change to rent, term, deposits, maintenance obligations, and tenant rights. Upload your original lease and the revised version to instantly see what changed in rental amount, lease duration, termination terms, and landlord-tenant responsibilities.

Free and no sign-up required.

Original Document

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Modified Document

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Key Takeaways

Instantly identify changes to monthly rent, security deposits, late fees, and other financial obligations between lease versions

Detect modifications to lease term, renewal options, termination rights, and notice requirements that affect your tenancy

Spot added or removed provisions affecting maintenance responsibilities, property use restrictions, and landlord access rights

Compare rent, term, renewal, maintenance, and default clauses across lease versions to catch landlord-friendly shifts before signing

1-2 minutes*

Average Comparison Time

99.2% accuracy*

Comparison Accuracy

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Document Security

* Estimates based on typical documents. Actual results vary by document type and complexity.

Lease agreement comparison is the process of comparing two versions of a residential or commercial lease to identify all modifications, additions, and deletions affecting the landlord-tenant relationship. This comparison is essential when reviewing lease renewals, negotiating lease terms, or understanding changes proposed by landlords or property management companies. Common changes include adjustments to monthly rent and rent escalation clauses, modifications to security deposit amounts and return conditions, alterations to lease duration and renewal terms, changes to maintenance and repair responsibilities, adjustments to late fees and other charges, modifications to subletting and assignment rights, and changes to early termination provisions and associated penalties. Professional comparison tools systematically highlight differences in critical sections: rent and fees, term and renewal, deposits and refunds, maintenance obligations, use restrictions, default and termination, and dispute resolution mechanisms. The process helps tenants understand exactly what obligations have increased or what protections have been reduced, ensuring they can negotiate effectively and enter lease agreements with full knowledge of their financial commitments, rights, and responsibilities throughout the tenancy.

How It Works

1
Upload both lease versions

Upload your current or original lease and the renewal or revised version. Both documents are encrypted for security.

2
AI analyzes all provisions

Our AI compares rent, deposits, term, maintenance obligations, use restrictions, termination terms, and all other lease provisions.

3
Review highlighted changes

See color-coded differences showing additions, deletions, and modifications to rent, responsibilities, rights, and restrictions.

4
Negotiate or decide

Understand exactly what changed, then negotiate better terms, request original language, or accept with full knowledge of new obligations.

Original vs Modified

Original

The monthly rent shall be $2,400.00, due on the first day of each calendar month. Landlord shall be responsible for all structural repairs, plumbing, and HVAC maintenance. In the event of early termination, Tenant shall provide sixty (60) days written notice and shall pay an early termination fee equal to one (1) month's rent.

Modified

The monthly rent shall be $2,850.00, due on the first day of each calendar month. Tenant shall be responsible for all interior repairs, including plumbing fixtures and HVAC filter replacement. In the event of early termination, Tenant shall provide ninety (90) days written notice and shall pay an early termination fee equal to three (3) months' rent.

Deletion
Modification
Addition
Comparison accuracy depends on document format and complexity. Always review the generated comparison before acting on it. See our Terms of Use for full disclaimers.

Why Compare Your Lease Agreement Before Signing?

Lease agreements govern rent obligations, maintenance responsibilities, and termination rights for years at a time. Even minor clause changes between drafts can shift thousands of dollars in costs from landlord to tenant.

Detect Rent and Fee Increases

Landlords may adjust monthly rent, late fees, or annual escalation percentages between drafts. Lease comparison instantly highlights every financial change so tenants can verify agreed-upon amounts before signing.

Catch Shifted Maintenance Responsibilities

A revised lease may transfer HVAC, plumbing, or structural repair duties from landlord to tenant. Comparing lease versions reveals when costly maintenance obligations have been quietly reassigned.

Verify Early Termination and Renewal Terms

Changes to notice periods, termination fees, or renewal option deadlines can lock you into unfavorable lease terms. Comparison ensures termination clauses match what was negotiated between parties.

Identify Security Deposit Modifications

Increases to deposit amounts or changes to refund conditions can tie up significant capital. Lease agreement comparison highlights modifications to deposit clauses and return timelines.

Spot Use Restriction and Subletting Changes

Revised leases may narrow permitted uses or eliminate subletting rights without clear notice. Side-by-side comparison catches restrictions that limit how you can operate within or assign the leased space.

Protect Against Liability Clause Expansions

Broadened indemnification or added hold-harmless clauses can make tenants liable for injuries or damages beyond their control. Lease comparison ensures liability provisions remain balanced and insurable.

What We Compare

Rent and fee tracking - identifies changes to monthly rent, security deposits, late fees, pet fees, and other charges

Term comparison - highlights modifications to lease duration, renewal options, and rent escalation schedules

Responsibility analysis - detects changes to maintenance obligations, repair duties, and utility payment responsibilities

Rights review - spots modifications to subletting rights, early termination options, and tenant protections

Restriction monitoring - identifies added or removed limitations on property use, guests, pets, or modifications

Issues We Detect

Increased rent beyond market rates or unexpected rent escalation clauses for renewal periods

Added or increased fees including higher late fees, new administrative charges, or penalty provisions

Weakened tenant protections such as shortened notice periods or removed early termination rights

Shifted maintenance responsibilities requiring tenants to handle repairs typically covered by landlords

Added restrictions limiting property use, guest policies, or subletting rights not in original agreement

Hypothetical Case Study by Justee

Justee recently analyzed comparing her original 3-year commercial lease with a renewal offer from the building management for a small business owner in Denver, CO.

Issue Found: The renewal added a clause requiring tenant-paid property taxes and insurance, effectively increasing her annual costs by $8,400 beyond the stated rent increase, converting what appeared to be a gross lease into a modified gross lease

Justee Recommendation: She negotiated with the landlord to cap her portion of property tax and insurance increases at 5% annually, protecting against unexpected expense spikes while accepting some cost-sharing

Maintenance and Repairs

Original Version

"Landlord shall maintain the premises in good repair, including all structural, mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems."

Revised Version

"Tenant shall maintain the premises in good repair. Landlord shall maintain only structural elements of the building foundation and roof."

Why it matters: This revision dramatically shifts repair responsibility to the tenant. The original lease placed most maintenance obligations on the landlord, while the revised version makes the tenant responsible for HVAC, electrical, plumbing, appliances, and more. This could result in thousands of dollars in unexpected repair costs that were previously the landlord's obligation.

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"Justee is redefining the legal document compliance process across all practice areas, transforming hours of work into minutes, while reducing stress and boosting accuracy."

Artem Dolukhanyan
Artem Dolukhanyan

Partner, Corporate Transactions at Grayver Law Group

AI Comparison vs. Manual Comparison

FeatureJustee AI ComparisonManual Comparison
Comparison Time2-5 minutes1-3 hours
CostFree trial available$200-800+ per comparison
Change DetectionEvery word trackedMay miss subtle changes
Visual HighlightingColor-coded changesVaries by tool
Availability24/7 instantBusiness hours
* Comparison data represents estimates based on industry research and internal testing for typical contract types. Review times, costs, and accuracy percentages vary by document complexity, length, jurisdiction, and specific legal requirements. See full disclaimer below.

Official Resources

HUD Tenant Rights and Resources

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development guidance on tenant protections and rental housing rights

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Rental Resources

Federal consumer protection resources for understanding rental agreements and housing rights

Cornell Law: Contracts

Legal framework for contract modifications

Important Legal Disclaimer

Not Legal Advice: The information and analysis provided by Justee AI is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, our AI-powered service is not a substitute for professional legal counsel.

No Attorney-Client Relationship: Use of Justee AI does not create an attorney-client relationship. Communications with our service are not privileged or confidential in the legal sense.

Consult a Professional: For specific legal matters, we strongly recommend consulting with a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction. Legal requirements vary by location and circumstances, and only a licensed attorney can provide advice tailored to your specific situation.

Performance Estimates (*): All statistics, metrics, and numerical claims on this page — including review times, cost comparisons, accuracy percentages, and database size — are estimates based on internal testing, industry research, and typical use cases. Actual results vary based on document type, complexity, length, jurisdiction, and other factors. Cost comparisons reference publicly available average attorney rates and are not guaranteed savings. "1M+ laws and regulations" refers to the breadth of Justee's reference database and does not imply that every provision is checked against every law for every document.

By using our service, you acknowledge that you have read and agree to our Terms of Use and understand the limitations of AI-powered legal analysis. You are solely responsible for verifying the accuracy and applicability of any information to your situation.

Lease Agreement Comparison FAQ

Focus on monthly rent and any escalation clauses, security deposit requirements, lease term and renewal options, maintenance and repair responsibilities, late fees and other charges, early termination provisions, subletting rights, and notice requirements. Also check for new restrictions on property use, guests, pets, or modifications. Even small changes to these can significantly impact your costs and rights.

In most areas, landlords can increase rent to market rates unless limited by rent control laws, rent stabilization ordinances, or affordable housing program requirements. Some cities cap annual increases (e.g., 5-10%), while others have no limits. Comparison helps you see the exact increase and compare it to local market rates and any applicable legal limits in your jurisdiction.

Landlords can propose new fees in renewal offers, but you are not obligated to accept them. Common additions include administrative fees, amenity fees, or charges for services previously included. Use comparison to identify all new or increased fees, calculate the true cost impact, then negotiate to remove them or request offsetting concessions like lower rent increases.

If your lease expires and you continue paying rent that the landlord accepts, you typically become a month-to-month tenant under the original lease terms. However, some leases specify automatic renewal terms or new conditions that apply. Review your current lease's expiration provisions, and use comparison if the landlord later claims different terms apply to your month-to-month tenancy.

Security deposit interest requirements vary by state and sometimes by city. Some jurisdictions require landlords to pay interest on deposits held beyond one year, while others have no interest requirement. When comparison a lease renewal, check if deposit terms changed - such as increased deposit amounts, new deduction provisions, or modified return timelines that may violate local laws.

Legal review is highly advisable for commercial leases due to their complexity and significant financial impact. Commercial leases often involve complicated provisions for common area maintenance (CAM) charges, tax and insurance passthroughs, personal guarantees, and build-out obligations. Our comparison tool shows what changed, but a real estate attorney can advise whether those changes are market-standard and protect your business interests.

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Last updated: May 13, 2026

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