North Carolina Carbon Monoxide Detector Law
What homeowners and renters in North Carolina need to know about CO detector requirements.
The Law in Plain English
Required in all residential occupancies under the state building code.
What This Means for Homeowners & Renters
North Carolina requires carbon monoxide detectors in all residential dwellings, a mandate in effect since 2012. Required in all residential occupancies under the state building code. This law applies to homeowners and renters alike. Landlords are required to install and maintain CO detectors in rental units. Compliance is straightforward: install at least one UL-listed CO detector on each floor of your home, with emphasis on areas near sleeping rooms. Replace the unit every 5–7 years as the electrochemical sensor degrades over time regardless of visible function.
Landlord Requirements in North Carolina
Landlords are required to install and maintain CO detectors in rental units.
If you are a renter and your landlord has not provided a working CO detector, you have the right to request one in writing. Document the request and keep a copy. In most states with a landlord mandate, failure to provide a detector is a code violation that can be reported to local housing authorities.
Recommended CO Detector Placement
Regardless of what North Carolina law requires, safety experts recommend placing CO detectors on every level of your home, within 10 feet of each sleeping area, and near any fuel-burning appliance (furnace, water heater, gas stove, fireplace). Replace your CO detector every 5–7 years — electrochemical sensors degrade over time regardless of whether the device appears functional.
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