
If you received this Notice, you must include proof of your financial distress when you turn in your COVID-19-Related Financial Distress Declaration. You are not high income if your household earns less than $100,000 per year. High income means your household earns at least 130% of the median income where your home is located. If your landlord has proof you have a high income, they can give a Notice that says if you turn in a COVID-19-Related Declaration of Financial Distress, you must also turn in proof of your financial distress. If you decide to waive last month's rent (choice 2) you'll include what the last month's rent amount is and that your tenant doesn't owe you rent for their last month.ĩ0-day Notice to Quit (Section 8 housing only) That if the tenant has lived in the home for more than 1 year they have (1) a right to money to help them move ( relocation assistance) or (2) they don't have to pay their last month's rent (rent waiver). If required by the Tenant Protection Act the Notice must also include
#NOTICE TO QUIT FORM HOW TO#
That the month-to-month tenancy will end in 30 days if they're giving a 30-day Notice or in 60 days if they're giving a 60-day Notice.Ī statement on how to pick up any property left behind ( reclaim abandoned personal property)

If you get a 30 or 60-day Notices to Quit, it must be in writing and include: New housing that's been built within the last 15 years.If the landlord lives in ½ of a duplex full-time and rents out the other half.If the landlord lives in the rental home (single-family home with no more than 2 in-law units, or condominium) with their tenant except if the landlord is a primary tenant (they rent a home from the owner and then rent out to other tenants).If there's more than 1 tenant in the same home, the one year is measured by the tenant who’s lived there the longest. If their tenant has lived in the home for less than a year.In some cases, a landlord can use the 30-day or 60-day Notice to end a rental agreement without a just cause. They will need a just cause if required the Tenant Protection Act of 2019. In many cases, landlords can’t cancel a month-to-month tenancy for just any reason. A landlord uses a 60-day Notice to Quit if their tenant has been renting for 1 year or more. Then you count every day.ģ0-day or 60-day Notice to Quit (Notice to end rental agreement)Ī landlord uses a 30-day Notice to Quit (move out) to end a month-to-month tenancy if the tenant has been renting for less than 1 year. This Notice can go by other names like a 3-day Notice to Vacate, 3-day Unconditional Notice to Quit.ĭay 1 is the 1st day after you got the Notice. Say clearly that the tenant has to move out as soon as the 3 days are up (not counting Saturdays, Sundays, or court holidays) If your tenancy falls under the Tenant Protection Act, your landlord gives you this Notice if you didn't do what was asked in a 3-Day Notice to Perform Covenants or Quit by the deadline.ĭescribe everything that the tenant did to deserve a 3-day Notice to move out, including details and dates Moving in other tenants (subtenants) without the landlord's permission Negatively affecting other people’s health and safety (using highly flammable or toxic chemicals at the home)Ĭausing major damage to the home that makes it worth much less money (sometimes called commits waste) If you don't fix the problem they tell you about in this Notice then they can give you a 3-day Notice to Quit (without the option to fix the problem) to end your tenancy.ģ-day Notice to Quit (Move out because of serious lease violation)Ī landlord gives their tenant a 3-day Notice to Quit (move out) if they think the tenant is responsible for serious problems at the rental home like:Ĭausing or allowing a nuisance on the property (like a dangerous dog)ĭoing something illegal (like sell drugs) at the home If your tenancy falls under the Tenant Protection Act, this is also the Notice your landlord must give you before they give you a 3-day Notice to Quit (next section). This is sometimes called a "cease and desist letter."


Some city laws (ordinances) require that your landlord send you a letter about the problem before they give you notice. Don't include Saturdays, Sundays, or court holidays when counting the days.Day 1 is the 1st day after you got the Notice.That the tenant must fix the problem or move out in 3 days (not counting Saturdays, Sundays, or court holidays). The Notice must be in writing and include:Ī description of what the tenant is doing to violate the lease This Notice can go by other names, like a 3-Day Notice to Cure. The Notice must ask the tenant to fix the problem within 3 days or move out. A landlord can use this kind of Notice if their tenant isn’t following the rental agreement or lease, and the problem can be fixed.įor example, the tenant has a pet and the lease says "no pets," or the tenant is bothering neighbors with loud noise.
