Defend against fair housing claims, stay compliant, and protect your properties with experienced landlord-focused legal counsel.
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Landlord-Focused Fair Housing Defense
Fair housing complaints are among the most costly legal challenges a property owner or manager can face. A single mishandled accommodation request, an inconsistently applied policy, or an untrained leasing agent can trigger a HUD investigation, a civil lawsuit, or both. The financial exposure is significant. The reputational damage can be lasting.
C & W Law Group, P.C. defends landlords, property managers, and real estate investors against fair housing complaints across Arizona and Nevada, and helps you build the compliance framework that prevents those complaints from arising in the first place.
Serving Arizona and Nevada Property Owners Only.
About C & W Law Group
Fair housing law is one of the most nuanced and rapidly evolving areas affecting the rental housing industry. The attorneys at C & W Law Group have spent decades working exclusively on the property owner’s side of these disputes. We do not represent tenants or complainants. Our entire practice is built around protecting the interests of landlords, property managers, and multifamily operators.
That singular focus means when a fair housing complaint lands on your desk, you are working with attorneys who understand your operations, know the defenses that work, and have the experience to navigate HUD investigations and civil litigation from a position of strength.
Sound Familiar?
Real-world fair housing issues landlords face daily, handled with clear strategy and experienced legal guidance.
You have received notice that a fair housing complaint has been filed with HUD or the Arizona Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division. An investigation has been opened and you need legal representation immediately.
A tenant has submitted an accommodation request related to a disability. You are uncertain what documentation you can require, what your obligations are, and how to respond without creating additional legal exposure.
A tenant is claiming the right to keep an emotional support animal despite your no-pets policy. You have received a letter from a healthcare provider but are unsure whether it meets HUD standards or whether you are required to approve the request.
A leasing agent or property manager made a statement or applied a policy in a way that a prospective tenant is alleging was discriminatory. You need to understand your exposure and how to respond.
Your property has received a fair housing complaint related to familial status and you need guidance on whether your occupancy standards comply with federal guidelines.
A fair housing organization has conducted a test of your property and is alleging that your team treated prospective applicants differently based on a protected characteristic.
Your leasing or management team has been applying policies differently across residents in ways that, even unintentionally, may expose the property to a disparate treatment or disparate impact claim.
Compliance is not just about intent. It is about policy, documentation, consistency, and staff conduct. A landlord can face a valid fair housing complaint without ever intending to discriminate. Inconsistent policy application, a poorly handled accommodation request, or a single statement by a leasing agent can be enough to trigger an investigation. Understanding your obligations and having systems in place to meet them is the only reliable defense.
Arizona fair housing obligations extend beyond federal law. The Arizona Civil Rights Act, codified under ARS 41-1491 through 41-1491.37, mirrors the federal Fair Housing Act and is enforced by the Civil Rights Division of the Arizona Attorney General’s Office. Complainants in Arizona may file with either HUD or the Arizona Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division within one year of the alleged discrimination.
Arizona property owners and managers should be aware that some Arizona cities and municipalities have enacted additional local fair housing ordinances that go beyond state and federal protections. The City of Tucson, for example, includes source of income as a protected class, meaning landlords in certain jurisdictions cannot refuse to rent to tenants based on their use of housing vouchers or other lawful sources of income. Understanding which local ordinances apply to your specific properties is a critical part of fair housing compliance in Arizona.
The Arizona Department of Housing actively trains housing providers on fair housing obligations, and the Civil Rights Division investigates and resolves housing discrimination complaints statewide. A finding of reasonable cause by the Arizona Attorney General carries the same legal weight as a HUD determination and can lead to civil penalties, damages, and injunctive relief.
Nevada fair housing law closely tracks federal protections but is administered through its own enforcement structure. The Nevada Equal Rights Commission is the state agency responsible for investigating housing discrimination complaints in Nevada. Landlords and property managers operating in Nevada must comply with both the federal Fair Housing Act and applicable Nevada state law.
In Nevada, source of income protections have been enacted in certain jurisdictions, and landlords should confirm which local ordinances apply to their properties in markets including Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno. Clark County and Washoe County each have their own fair housing resources and enforcement considerations that Nevada landlords need to understand.
Nevada law also requires landlords to engage meaningfully with reasonable accommodation and modification requests under the same framework as federal law. A failure to respond appropriately to an accommodation request in Nevada carries the same legal exposure as it does under federal standards, including the risk of a complaint to the Nevada Equal Rights Commission, HUD, or a private civil action.
Property managers and investors with portfolios spanning both Arizona and Nevada must navigate two distinct enforcement environments alongside federal oversight. C & W Law Group practices actively in both states and advises clients on the specific requirements of each jurisdiction.
What We Handle
Our landlord tenant practice covers every stage of the relationship between a property owner and a tenant, from getting the lease right on day one to regaining possession of your property when a tenancy goes wrong.
When a non-paying or non-compliant tenant refuses to leave, we file and prosecute eviction actions in Arizona and Nevada justice courts and superior courts for both residential and commercial properties. We handle all filings, appear at the hearing on your behalf, and coordinate the writ of restitution with the sheriff’s office. One procedural error forces a complete restart. That does not happen here.
When a tenant has violated the Arizona Residential Landlord and Tenant Act directly, through criminal activity, serious property damage, or conduct creating an immediate danger to other occupants, a special detainer action applies under ARS 33-1368. Hearings are set within three to six days of filing. We manage the expedited procedures and move these cases as fast as Arizona law allows.
Nevada eviction law is governed by NRS Chapter 40 and NRS Chapter 118A. You get full representation through the unlawful detainer process throughout Nevada, from summary evictions for non-payment of rent, lease violations, and nuisance conduct, through to formal eviction trials when the situation demands it. We know when each path is appropriate and advise you clearly from the start.
Unpaid rent is the most common reason landlords call us, and the notice served at the very start determines whether your case moves forward or gets dismissed on a technicality. In Arizona a five-day notice to pay or quit is required. In Nevada it is seven days. We prepare and serve notices correctly so the clock does not have to start over.
When a tenant is violating their lease but has not stopped paying rent, a formal documented notice on the record is the correct response. Non-compliance notices are drafted and tailored to the specific violation, whether it involves unauthorized occupants, property damage, noise complaints, unauthorized pets, or failure to maintain the unit. How this step is handled determines your legal position if the situation escalates.
When a tenant is violating their lease but has not stopped paying rent, a formal documented notice on the record is the correct response. Non-compliance notices are drafted and tailored to the specific violation, whether it involves unauthorized occupants, property damage, noise complaints, unauthorized pets, or failure to maintain the unit. How this step is handled determines your legal position if the situation escalates.
Commercial evictions and lease disputes carry higher financial stakes and operate under different statutory rules than residential matters. Commercial property owners and managers get representation in eviction proceedings, lease enforcement, non-payment disputes, and lease terminations across Arizona and Nevada.
Arizona requires landlords to return a deposit or provide an itemized statement of deductions within 14 business days after a tenancy ends. Nevada allows 30 days under NRS 118A. Missing those deadlines exposes you to double damage claims. You get guidance on compliant handling throughout and strong defense against bad-faith tenant claims when disputes arise.
A municipal code enforcement complaint creates landlord obligations that, if mishandled, carry legal consequences and open the door to tenant-side habitability claims. Property owners and managers get clear advice on responding to notices, coordinating remediation within legally compliant timeframes, and protecting their position throughout.
Ending a tenancy, whether at the natural expiration of a lease or because of a material breach, requires specific attention to state-mandated notice requirements in both Arizona and Nevada. Terminations are handled correctly so you are not exposed to wrongful eviction or retaliatory conduct claims after the fact.
Common Risk Areas
Small missteps in policies or communication can quickly turn into serious fair housing complaints and costly legal exposure.
Saying no to an emotional support animal request based on a no-pets policy alone, without evaluating the individual request and documentation, is not legally defensible and is one of the most common sources of fair housing complaints against property managers.
Applying lease rules, screening criteria, or occupancy standards differently across residents, even without discriminatory intent, can form the basis of a disparate treatment claim. Consistency in documentation and application is essential.
When a tenant submits an accommodation or modification request, the law requires a good-faith interactive process. Ignoring the request, delaying unreasonably, or denying without adequate review creates significant exposure.
Fair housing disputes are often decided on what is in the file. Landlords who cannot produce records of their policies, training, accommodation evaluations, and resident communications are at a serious disadvantage in any investigation or litigation.
A single discriminatory statement by a leasing agent, whether in person, by phone, or in writing, can trigger a complaint. Training is not optional. It is a risk management tool with direct financial implications.
How It Works
When a complaint is filed, knowing what comes next reduces uncertainty and puts you in a stronger position from the start.

We review the complaint in full, assess the facts, evaluate your policies and documentation, and identify your strongest defenses. Early legal strategy can prevent escalation and significantly affect the outcome.

We prepare your formal response to HUD or the relevant state agency. The response is your first opportunity to frame the facts, present your evidence, and establish your compliance with applicable law. Getting this right matters enormously.

We manage communications with the investigating agency throughout the process, respond to requests for information, and work to close the investigation at the agency stage wherever possible.

If HUD or the state agency finds reasonable cause, the matter proceeds to a formal charge. We negotiate conciliation settlements where appropriate and defend you aggressively through administrative hearings and civil litigation when the situation demands it.
Know When to Act
Early legal guidance can prevent escalation, reduce risk, and protect your position before issues turn into formal claims.
The response timeline is short and your first response sets the tone for everything that follows. Do not respond without legal counsel.
Getting the process right from the beginning is far less expensive than defending a complaint after the fact.
Policies that are not reviewed for fair housing compliance before implementation can create liability you did not know existed.
If a staff member made a statement or took an action that could be construed as discriminatory, early legal advice on how to respond and document the situation can limit your exposure significantly.
A compliance audit and staff training investment is a fraction of the cost of defending a single fair housing complaint.
Understanding the Risk
A fair housing complaint is not just a legal problem. It is a business problem with a specific dollar figure attached.
Civil penalties for a first fair housing violation can reach $16,000. Subsequent violations carry penalties up to $65,000. Actual damages, compensatory damages for emotional distress, punitive damages, and attorney fee awards can push total exposure well into six figures. Pattern and practice cases brought by the Department of Justice carry even greater financial and reputational consequences.
Beyond the financial cost, a complaint creates staff distraction, operational disruption, and reputational risk that affects your entire portfolio.
The most effective fair housing strategy prevents complaints through proper training, compliant policies, and consistent documentation. The second most effective strategy is having the right attorneys in your corner the moment a complaint is filed.
Who We Serve
Focused legal support for landlords, property managers, and investors navigating fair housing compliance and defense.
Large portfolios come with increased exposure to fair housing claims. We support management teams with complaint defense, policy audits, and training to reduce risk across every property.
Even a single complaint can have serious financial consequences. We guide individual landlords through compliance, accommodation requests, and defense with clear, practical legal support.
For investors managing multi-property portfolios, one fair housing issue can impact multiple assets. We help protect your investments through proactive compliance and strategic legal defense.
Fair housing laws can still apply in certain commercial or mixed-use settings. We advise and defend owners facing discrimination claims, policy challenges, or compliance concerns.
Why C & W
Even a single complaint can lead to significant financial penalties, legal costs, and long-term impact on your operations.
We do not represent tenants or complainants. Our knowledge of fair housing law is developed entirely from the perspective of defending and advising property owners. There is no conflict of interest, ever.
Federal fair housing law applies in both states, but Arizona and Nevada each have their own enforcement agencies, state-level protected classes, and procedural requirements. We practice actively in both states and know how each jurisdiction handles fair housing investigations and litigation.
We work with clients before complaints arise through policy audits, compliance reviews, and staff training, and we defend them aggressively when complaints do arise. Both capabilities matter. Most of our clients benefit from both.
Our attorney-reviewed platform gives property teams on-demand fair housing training built on real-world scenarios. Courses include assessments and are fully attorney-approved.
Testimonials
Service Areas
We represent landlords, property managers, and real estate investors throughout Arizona and Nevada, including major metro areas and surrounding communities across both states.
Frequently Asked Questions
A fair housing complaint can be filed with HUD, the Arizona Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division, the Nevada Equal Rights Commission, or as a private civil action. When filed with HUD, the agency notifies the respondent, conducts an investigation, and attempts conciliation. If conciliation fails and HUD finds reasonable cause, the matter proceeds to a formal charge and either an administrative hearing or federal court action. Having experienced legal representation from the moment you receive notice is critical.
HUD is required to complete its investigation within 100 days of the complaint being filed, though investigations frequently take longer. During that period, both parties provide information and documentation, and HUD may conduct interviews. The timeline underscores the importance of having legal counsel engaged from the beginning to manage communications and build your defense throughout the process.
Contact an attorney before responding to anything. Do not communicate directly with the complainant. Preserve all documentation related to the matter, including emails, lease files, accommodation requests, and policy records. Your initial response to HUD sets the foundation for your entire defense and should be prepared with legal guidance.
Yes. Even policies that are neutral on their face can create liability if applied inconsistently across residents in a way that correlates with a protected class. This is known as disparate treatment. Consistent documentation and uniform application of all policies are among the most important compliance tools available to landlords and property managers.
A reasonable accommodation is a change in rules, policies, practices, or services necessary to give a person with a disability equal opportunity to use and enjoy housing. Common examples include permitting an assistance animal despite a no-pets policy, providing a reserved parking space for a resident with mobility impairment, or modifying a payment deadline. Landlords must engage in a good-faith interactive process when evaluating requests and may ask for reliable documentation of the disability-related need.
Yes, but only in narrow circumstances. A denial may be legally defensible if the specific animal poses a direct threat to the health or safety of others, would cause substantial property damage, or if the tenant cannot provide reliable documentation of a disability-related need. Denial based solely on a no-pets policy, breed, or size without evaluating the individual request is not defensible. The process by which you evaluate and respond to ESA requests is as important as the decision itself.
Civil penalties for a first violation can reach $16,000. Subsequent violations carry penalties up to $65,000. In addition, a property owner may be liable for actual damages, compensatory damages for emotional distress, punitive damages, and the complainant’s attorney fees. Total exposure in a single case can reach well into six figures, and pattern and practice cases brought by the Department of Justice carry significantly greater consequences.
No. C & W Law Group exclusively represents landlords, property managers, and real estate investors. We do not represent tenants, complainants, or fair housing organizations under any circumstances.
Get Started
Time-sensitive response is required. Early legal strategy can prevent escalation and significantly affect the outcome of a HUD investigation or fair housing lawsuit.
If you have received notice of a complaint, the window to respond correctly is short. If you want to get ahead of your compliance exposure before a complaint arises, the right time to act is now.
Nine attorneys. Thirty-plus years of combined experience. One singular focus: protecting property owners across Arizona and Nevada.