

INSIGHTi
Federal Eviction Moratoriums in Response to
the COVID-19 Pandemic
October 6, 2020
On September 4, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) imposed a nationwide
temporary federal moratorium on residential evictions due to nonpayment of rent. The stated purpose of
the order is preventing the further spread of COVID-19, specifical y by preventing homelessness and
overcrowded housing conditions resulting from eviction. The action, which followed an Executive Order
directing the CDC to consider such a measure, is unprecedented both in terms of the federal reach into
what is traditional y state and local governance of landlord tenant law and in its novel use of a public
health authority.
The new national eviction moratorium took effect less than two weeks after the end of a different and
narrower set of eviction protections that were enacted by Congress and the President in the CARES Act
(§4024).
This Insight compares the two eviction moratoriums across several key features and ends with a review of
some outstanding questions raised by the new moratorium.
Key Features
Time Period
The CARES Act eviction moratorium began on March 27, 2020, and ended on July 24, 2020. However,
tenants could not be forced to vacate until 30 days after the expiration of the moratorium (August 23,
2020).
The new national eviction moratorium issued by CDC took effect September 4, 2020, and extends
through December 31, 2020. Unlike the CARES Act, the CDC order does not address notices to vacate.
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Coverage
The CARES Act eviction moratorium applied to federal y related properties, defined in the act to include
properties receiving federal assistance or with federal y backed financing. Researchers estimate the
CARES Act eviction moratorium applied to between 28% and 46% of occupied rental units national y.
The new national eviction moratorium applies to al renters who attest to meeting income and other
eligibility criteria set out in the order, which include having made al efforts to obtain government
assistance for rent and being at risk of homelessness or overcrowded housing conditions upon eviction.
Renters must assert their right to protection under the order by submitting a signed declaration of
eligibility to their landlords (Attachment A of the order).
The new moratorium does not supersede more protective state and local government eviction protections.
Cause
The CARES Act eviction moratorium prohibited landlords from initiating eviction proceedings against a
tenant for the nonpayment of rent and related fees.
The new national eviction moratorium also prohibits evictions tied to nonpayment of rent and related fees.
Fees, Penalties, and Back Rent
The CARES Act eviction moratorium prohibited landlords from charging fees or penalties for unpaid rent
during the period of the moratorium. The law did not forgive unpaid rent amounts.
The new national eviction moratorium does not prohibit landlords from charging fees or penalties for
unpaid rent. Like the CARES Act, it does not forgive unpaid rent amounts.
Enforcement
The CARES Act eviction moratorium did not include any penalties for noncompliance or other provisions
related to enforcement.
The new national eviction moratorium contains several provisions related to enforcement, including
penalties for landlords that violate the order and potential penalty of perjury for tenants who falsely
declare their eligibility.
Outstanding Questions
The new national eviction moratorium raises a number of legal and policy questions that remain
unresolved.
What is the legality of the order? Within a week of the order taking effect, at least one legal chal enge
to the CDC’s action had been filed.
How the order will be enforced? Given that evictions are a local court matter, absent additional
guidance, ambiguities in the CDC order wil be resolved by individual courts. Press accounts suggest that
courts across the country have differing interpretations of the order’s applicability, protections, and
requirements. This has led, for example, to the Texas Supreme Court issuing an order requiring landlords
to take specific steps to ensure their tenants are aware of the protections afforded by the eviction
moratorium before pursuing eviction. The Maryland District Court has determined that eviction filings for
nonpayment of rent can proceed, and that tenants are to raise the CDC order as a defense to eviction with
judges assessing the sufficiency of the evidence.
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Will the order be effective in stopping evictions, particularly if tenants are unaware of the order or if
there is confusion among courts, tenants, and landlords about if or how the order applies? Investigative
journalists raised questions about the effectiveness of the CARES Act moratorium in preventing evictions,
and a survey by the National Housing Law Project found that, despite the CARES Act protections, 91%
of legal aid attorneys reported il egal evictions in their areas. It is possible that the penalties in the CDC
order wil affect landlord decisions to pursue eviction and tenant decisions to pursue protections.
What are the financial implications of the moratorium, for both landlords who are owed significant
back rent and for tenants who owe rent and could face eviction when the moratorium ends? Prior to
release of the CDC order, the Aspen Institute—using data from the Census and other sources—estimated
that between 29 mil ion and 40 mil ion people in renter households, or 29-43% of al renter households,
were at risk of eviction by the end of 2020 due to COVID-19-related job loss and economic hardship.
Different estimates of the amount of unpaid rent that wil have accrued by the end of the moratorium
range from $25 bil ion to as high as $70 bil ion, owed by 10 mil ion to 15 mil ion renter households.
While the CARES Act provided funding that some states and localities have used to assist renters, there
have been cal s from both tenant advocates and landlord and housing organizations for Congress to
provide additional financial relief to either, or both, landlords and tenants to help cover the backlog of
unpaid rent. Several bil s that would fund emergency rent assistance have been introduced in Congress,
including several that were passed by the House: The Heroes Act, the Emergency Housing Protections
and Relief Act of 2020, and a revised version of The Heroes Act.
Author Information
Maggie McCarty
Libby Perl
Specialist in Housing Policy
Specialist in Housing Policy
Disclaimer
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to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of
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