Kansas Landlord Tenant Attorney Cost Calculator

Kansas starts with a 3-day notice benchmark and $175-$197 court filing benchmark For 2026 planning, the Kansas landlord tenant attorney page starts with that Kansas data point before adding your facts.

In Kansas, the calculator starts with a 3-day notice benchmark, $175-$197 court filing benchmark, and Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-206(a). It's built for eviction, habitability, lease-break, and security-deposit disputes.

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Kansas — at a glance

  • Core number: Kansas starts with a 3-day notice benchmark and $175-$197 court filing benchmark
  • Authority: Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-206(a) deadline rule
  • Local layer: 105 county inputs can affect timing and filing logistics.
  • Decision point: KS security-deposit exposure is modeled as 1x the deposit amount plus fees where allowed

Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Run the Landlord-Tenant Dispute Cost Calculator for Kansas

The calculator below is pre-loaded with Kansas (KS) rules. Your inputs stay in your browser — no account required.

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Key Takeaways for Kansas

  • Eviction timing. Kansas pages use a 3-day notice benchmark before court timing starts.
  • Deposit risk. KS security-deposit exposure is modeled as 1x the deposit amount plus fees where allowed.
  • Court cost anchor. Kansas uses $175-$197 court filing benchmark as a local filing-cost signal.
  • Rent control screen. KS is treated as no statewide rent-control default, so local ordinances should be checked before filing.

What does a landlord-tenant lawsuit cost in Kansas?

The KS estimate combines attorney-fee bands from the calculator engine with $175-$197 court filing benchmark and a $150 process-service input. For contested cases, the engine applies a 1.8x multiplier before it adds Kansas court timing.

A landlord tenant lawyer cost estimate should separate eviction, lease-break, habitability, rent escrow, illegal lockout, and security-deposit claims. A short nonpayment case may be handled for a flat fee, while a repair dispute with inspections, counterclaims, or discovery can require hourly litigation work.

Kansas eviction timing and court deadlines

For Kansas, the embedded calculator begins with a 3-day notice benchmark and then applies Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-206(a). If electronic filing is available, check the KS court portal before counting a lockout date.

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Kansas security-deposit exposure

The KS penalty group models wrongful withholding as 1x the deposit amount plus fees where allowed, and the dispute amount still depends on the tenant's actual deposit. That difference matters when a $1,500 deposit claim stays cheaper than a contested eviction.

Kansas rent-control and habitability checks

KS is treated as no statewide rent-control default, while habitability defenses still turn on Kansas pleadings, inspection records, and repair dates. Use the calculator to compare a 2-8 week nonpayment path with a 3-12 month habitability claim.

Habitability cases usually need photos, repair requests, inspection reports, rent ledgers, lease terms, text messages, and proof of access for repairs. Those records decide whether a lawyer can quote a narrow demand letter or needs to budget for a contested court case.

Kansas landlord lawyer fees vs tenant lawyer fees

Landlords usually price the case around rent owed, possession, damage to the unit, and whether the tenant raises defenses. Tenants usually price the case around housing stability, deposit recovery, repairs, retaliation, discrimination, or an illegal lockout. The calculator compares those legal-fee paths instead of assuming both sides face the same cost.

For a search like "Kansaslandlord tenant lawyer cost," ask whether the quote covers only a demand letter, a first court appearance, a settlement conference, discovery, trial, post-judgment collection, or an appeal. A low flat fee often covers only the earliest stage.

In New York, landlord-tenant law can involve housing court, rent stabilization, lease violations, holdover petitions, nonpayment petitions, illegal lockouts, warranty of habitability defenses, and security-deposit claims. A landlord tenant lawyer in New York should explain whether legal representation includes the petition, answer, first appearance, settlement stipulation, trial, warrant, stay, or appeal.

Tenants facing eviction should ask about free consultation options, legal aid, bar association referrals, and whether the attorney handles tenants, landlords, or both. Landlords should ask whether the lawyer's legal services include notice drafting, filing fee handling, process service, court costs, rent ledger review, and post-judgment enforcement.

A qualified attorney should also name the fee structure in plain English: free consultation or paid initial consultation, flat fee or hourly attorney fees, filing fee and court filing fees, service costs, legal advice, legal matter review, lease violation analysis, tenant law defenses, landlord tenant law deadlines, and whether draft notices or pleadings are included.

Kansas eviction lawyer consultation checklist

Bring the lease, rent ledger, notice, repair records, photos, inspection reports, text messages, payment history, deposit accounting, and housing court papers to the landlord-tenant attorney consultation. Those documents help the eviction lawyer decide whether the legal issue is a simple eviction case, a contested eviction case, a landlord-tenant dispute, or a broader tenant law problem.

Ask the lawyer in New York or any Kansas attorney whether landlords and tenants are billed differently, whether legal services include negotiation before housing court, and whether the quote covers court costs, attorney fees, filing fee exposure, legal representation, and post-judgment work.

Kansas eviction lawyer fees and housing court costs

Eviction lawyer fees depend on whether the case is uncontested, contested, commercial, subsidized, rent-stabilized, or tied to a lease violation. A simple nonpayment filing may be a flat fee, while a contested landlord-tenant dispute with discovery, counterclaims, or habitability defenses usually moves to hourly attorney fees.

Court costs can include the filing fee, index number or case fee, service of process, certified mailing, motion fees, marshal or sheriff fees, and transcript or appeal costs. The calculator separates those court costs from lawyer fees so the estimate matches the actual landlord-tenant stage.

Kansas landlord-tenant attorney consultation and fee arrangement

A landlord tenant lawyer estimate should explain the consultation fee, retainer fee, hourly rate, flat fee, court costs, filing fee, service fee, and whether the attorney charges separately for each appearance. Some New York lawyers charge a flat fee for a basic eviction case, but switch to hourly legal fees when the tenant files defenses, discovery demands, an order to show cause, or an appeal.

Ask whether the legal representation includes the type of eviction you actually face: nonpayment, holdover, nuisance, lease violation, owner use, roommate dispute, illegal lockout, rent-stabilized apartment, or commercial landlord-tenant issue. Experienced eviction lawyers and landlord-tenant attorneys often price each stage differently because the work changes after the first appearance.

In the five boroughs of New York, use the New York City Bar, New York State Bar, legal aid, and local housing-court resources to compare legal support before hiring a lawyer. Tenants facing eviction should ask about free consultation options and right-to-counsel programs; landlords should ask whether notice drafting, lease review, rent ledger cleanup, petition filing, and warrant enforcement are part of the same fee arrangement.

Kansas landlord-tenant lawyer cost checklist

  • Demand letter, notice review, or lease review before court.
  • Eviction filing, answer, counterclaims, and first appearance.
  • Habitability evidence, inspection records, rent ledger, and repair timeline.
  • Security-deposit itemization, photos, move-in condition, and move-out condition.
  • Trial, settlement agreement, writ, appeal, or collection after judgment.

When a Kansas housing dispute is worth hiring counsel

Hiring a lawyer is most likely to make sense when the dispute involves eviction risk, multiple months of rent, subsidized housing, a rent-controlled unit, habitability evidence, a lease termination, or deposit penalties. For smaller disputes, a demand letter, small-claims filing, mediation, or tenant-assistance program may cost less than full representation.

Kansas documents that change the estimate

Before relying on the estimate, gather the lease, notices, rent ledger, deposit receipt, move-in photos, move-out photos, repair requests, code-enforcement records, payment history, text messages, and court papers. Missing documents increase attorney time because the lawyer has to reconstruct the timeline.

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State-specific estimate overview

Kansas cost and deadline signals is the right starting point because statewide law sets the baseline, while the facts of your housing dispute determine the actual risk band. Use the calculator before you compare attorney quotes, court options, or settlement choices.

Factors that affect the Kansas estimate usually comes down to three inputs: the amount at stake, the deadline or statutory rule, and whether the matter can be resolved before a contested filing. The calculator keeps those inputs separate so the result is easier to challenge.

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Neighboring state comparison

StateComparison signalSource
KansasKansas starts with a 3-day notice benchmark and $175-$197 court filing benchmarkCurrent page data
MissouriRSMo § 473.153; 115 county inputs trackedKansas compared with nearby states; State data file
NebraskaNeb. Rev. Stat. § 30-2479; 93 county inputs trackedKansas compared with nearby states; State data file
Oklahoma58 O.S. § 527; 77 county inputs trackedKansas compared with nearby states; State data file

County-level cost factors

County variation matters in Kansas because clerk practices, hearing calendars, and local filing steps can change the time cost even when the statewide rule is fixed.

  • Johnson County: 597,574 residents, county seat in Olathe.
  • Sedgwick County: 523,824 residents, county seat in Wichita.
  • Shawnee County: 176,875 residents, county seat in Topeka.
  • Wyandotte County: 165,429 residents, county seat in Kansas City.
  • Douglas County: 118,053 residents, county seat in Lawrence.
Security deposit envelope on a kitchen counter

Next steps before you decide

  1. Run the calculator with your current numbers and save the 2026 result.
  2. Compare the result with documents, notices, invoices, or deadlines already in hand.
  3. Use the estimate to prepare a focused consultation or filing plan before the next deadline.

Common state questions

What is the main Kansas number in this Landlord-Tenant Dispute Cost Calculator?

Kansas starts with a 3-day notice benchmark and $175-$197 court filing benchmark The calculator uses that point as the first Kansas signal before it layers in user-entered facts.

Does the Kansas Kansas landlord tenant attorney replace a lawyer?

No. It is a planning tool for comparing numbers, deadlines, and risk signals. Confirm Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-206(a) deadline rule with an official source or a licensed professional.

Why do county details matter in Kansas?

Kansas has 105 county-level filing offices, court calendars, and local practices. Those local steps can change timing even when state law is the same.

What should I gather before using the Landlord-Tenant Dispute Cost Calculator?

Gather the dates, amounts, documents, and court notices tied to your situation. The calculator is more useful when those inputs are specific rather than estimated.

What is the next step after the Kansas estimate?

KS security-deposit exposure is modeled as 1x the deposit amount plus fees where allowed Use the result to decide whether to organize records, request a consultation, or file the next court or agency step.

Compare your inputs

Start with the free calculator, then confirm the next legal step with the ABA state-by-state lawyer directory.

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Sources cited inline. Last verified May 1, 2026. Statutes change — confirm with the official state bar before filing.