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SB206 • 2025

voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases

voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases

Housing
Did Not Pass

The latest official action shows that this bill did not move forward in that session.

Sponsor
Senators Feyen, Jacque, Jagler, Nass, Quinn, Wanggaard and Stafsholt, cosponsored by Representatives Krug, Brooks, Allen, Armstrong, Franklin, Goeben, B. Jacobson, Kaufert, Kitchens, Moses, Murphy, O'Connor, Ortiz-Velez, Sortwell, Spiros, Tusler and Wittke
Last action
2026-03-23
Official status
S - Tabled
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases

voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases Status: S - Tabled

What This Bill Does

  • voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases Status: S - Tabled

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-23 Sen.

    Failed to pass pursuant to Senate Joint Resolution 1

  2. 2026-02-18 Sen.

    Laid on table

  3. 2026-02-17 Sen.

    Fiscal estimate received

  4. 2026-02-17 Sen.

    Fiscal estimate received

  5. 2026-02-17 Sen.

    Placed on calendar 2-18-2026 pursuant to Senate Rule 18(1)

  6. 2026-02-16 Sen.

    Senate Amendment 1 to Senate Substitute Amendment 1 offered by Senator Feyen

  7. 2026-02-12 Sen.

    Executive action taken

  8. 2026-02-12 Sen.

    Report adoption of Senate Substitute Amendment 1 recommended by Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry , Ayes 4, Noes 1

  9. 2026-02-12 Sen.

    Report passage as amended recommended by Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry , Ayes 4, Noes 1

  10. 2026-02-12 Sen.

    Available for scheduling

  11. 2026-02-03 Sen.

    Senate Substitute Amendment 1 offered by Senator Feyen

  12. 2025-10-02 Sen.

    Public hearing held

  13. 2025-04-22 Sen.

    Representative Wichgers added as a cosponsor

  14. 2025-04-17 Sen.

    Representatives Behnke and Snyder added as cosponsors

  15. 2025-04-16 Sen.

    Introduced by Senators Feyen , Jacque , Jagler , Nass , Quinn , Wanggaard and Stafsholt ; cosponsored by Representatives Krug , Brooks , Allen , Armstrong , Franklin , Goeben , B. Jacobson , Kaufert , Kitchens , Moses , Murphy , O'Connor , Ortiz-Velez , Sortwell , Spiros , Tusler and Wittke

  16. 2025-04-16 Sen.

    Read first time and referred to Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry

Official Summary Text

voidable provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases
Status: S - Tabled

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Wisconsin Legislature: SB206: Bill Text

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Proposal Text
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SB206: Bill Text

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2025 - 2026 LEGISLATURE
LRB-2555/1
JAM:cdc
2025 SENATE BILL 206
April 16, 2025 - Introduced by Senators
Feyen
,
Jacque
,
Jagler
,
Nass
,
Quinn
,
Wanggaard
and
Stafsholt
, cosponsored by Representatives
Krug
,
Brooks
,
Allen
,
Armstrong
,
Franklin
,
Goeben
,
B. Jacobson
,
Kaufert
,
Kitchens
,
Moses
,
Murphy
,
O'Connor
,
Ortiz-Velez
,
Sortwell
,
Spiros
,
Tusler
and
Wittke
. Referred to Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry.
SB206,1,4
1
An Act

to amend
704.44 (intro.), 704.44 (1m) (intro.), 704.44 (9) and 704.44
2
(10);
to create
421.103 (5) and 704.445 of the statutes;
relating to:
voidable
3
provisions in residential rental agreements and the application of the
4
Wisconsin Consumer Act to leases.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Under current law, a residential lease is void and unenforceable if it contains certain provisions (voidable provisions). Examples of voidable provisions include provisions that: 1) allow landlords to refuse to renew a lease because a tenant has contacted an entity for law enforcement, health, or safety services; 2) waive a landlord’s obligation to mitigate damages; 3) impose liability on a tenant for personal injury arising from causes clearly beyond the tenant’s control, and; 4) allow landlords to terminate a tenancy for a crime committed in relation to the rental property when the tenant’s lease did not include a statutorily required notice of domestic abuse protections.
This bill provides that if court of competent jurisdiction finds that a residential lease includes a voidable provision, a tenant may elect to: 1) void the lease and have their tenancy converted into a periodic tenancy, or; 2) sever the voidable provision from their lease and continue under the remainder of the lease.
In addition, in April 2024, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals published a decision,
Koble Invs. v Marquardt
, 2024 WI App 26, regarding certain landlord and tenant matters. As of February 28, 2025, the case was on appeal to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, with parties’ first briefings due to the court in March 2025.
Among the holdings in
Koble
, the court of appeals determined that a particular landlord was acting as a “debt collector” and that landlord’s tenant was a “customer” as those terms are defined under Wisconsin Consumer Act. The court of appeals also held that because the landlord violated a provision of the Wisconsin Consumer Act, the tenant’s attorney was entitled to recover reasonable attorney fees and court costs. Under this bill, the Wisconsin Consumer Act does not apply to residential leases or mobile home leases.
In the same case, the court of appeals held that the tenant’s lease was void and unenforceable under landlord and tenant law, and that, under another law enforcing fair methods of competition, the tenant could recover twice the amount of the tenant’s pecuniary loss, together with reasonable attorney fees and court costs. The bill provides that under landlord and tenant law, a person injured by a voidable provision can recover twice the amount of the pecuniary loss, together with reasonable attorney fees and court costs, and provides that such pecuniary loss does not include any rent paid by the tenant. The bill also limits the remedies a person may seek when a rental agreement includes a voidable provision to only those remedies provided in the bill.
For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:
SB206,1
1
Section

1
.
421.103 (5) of the statutes is created to read:
SB206,2,3
2
421.103
(5)
Chapters 421 to 427 do not apply to residential rental agreements
3
governed under s. 710.15 or ch. 704.
SB206,2
4
Section

2
.
704.44 (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB206,2,10
5
704.44

Residential rental agreement that contains certain provisions
6
is void
.
(intro.) Notwithstanding s. 704.02,
a residential rental agreement is void
7
and unenforceable if it

and subject to s. 704.445, a tenant may elect to void a
8
residential rental agreement, or sever a provision from a residential rental
9
agreement, if a court of competent jurisdiction finds that the residential rental
10
agreement
does any of the following:
SB206,3
11
Section

3
.
704.44 (1m) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB206,3,3
1
704.44
(1m)
(intro.)
Allows

Authorizes
a landlord to do any of the following
2
because a tenant has contacted an entity for law enforcement services, health
3
services, or safety services:
SB206,4
4
Section

4
.
704.44 (9) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB206,3,8
5
704.44
(9)

Allows

Authorizes
the landlord to terminate the tenancy of a
6
tenant based solely on the commission of a crime in or on the rental property if the
7
tenant, or someone who lawfully resides with the tenant, is the victim, as defined in
8
s. 950.02 (4), of that crime.
SB206,5
9
Section

5
.
704.44 (10) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB206,3,12
10
704.44
(10)

Allows

Authorizes
the landlord to terminate the tenancy of a
11
tenant for a crime committed in relation to the rental property and the rental
12
agreement does not include the notice required under s. 704.14.
SB206,6
13
Section

6
.
704.445 of the statutes is created to read:
SB206,3,20
14
704.445

Remedies for voidable residential rental agreements.

(1)
If a
15
tenant elects to void the tenant’s residential agreement under s. 704.44, the
16
tenant’s tenancy shall become a periodic tenancy as defined under s. 704.01 (2), and
17
the tenant shall be responsible for the payment of rent, utilities, parking, and other
18
charges under terms and conditions identical to the terms and conditions as set
19
forth in the original residential rental agreement, but not including a provision
20
described under s. 704.44 (1m) to (10).
SB206,3,23
21
(2)
If a tenant elects to sever a provision from his or her residential rental
22
agreement as provided under s. 704.44, the unsevered portion of the residential
23
rental agreement shall be given full effect.
SB206,4,3
24
(3)
A tenant’s election to void or sever a provision from his or her residential
1
rental agreement as provided under s. 704.44 is effective upon the tenant giving
2
notice of the election to the landlord in the same manner as specified in s. 704.21
3
(2).
SB206,4,11
4
(4)
A person suffering pecuniary loss directly caused by a residential rental
5
agreement’s inclusion of a provision described under s. 704.44 (1m) to (10) may sue
6
for damages therefor in any court of competent jurisdiction and shall recover twice
7
the amount of such pecuniary loss, together with costs, including a reasonable
8
attorney fee. Pecuniary loss under this subsection does not include rental payments
9
the tenant made under his or her residential rental agreement that included a
10
provision described under s. 704.44 (1m) to (10) or any rule promulgated under this
11
chapter.
SB206,4,14
12
(5)
A person injured by a residential rental agreement’s inclusion of a
13
provision described under s. 704.44 (1m) to (10) is limited to the remedies provided
14
under this section.
SB206,4,15
15
(end)

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