Last Updated: April 30, 2024 by Roberto Valenzuela A lease termination letter provides notice (from either the landlord or the tenant) to end a rental agreement, most often a month-to-month lease. State laws specify different notice requirements for different rental situations, such as month-to-month, fixed-term, or no lease.
A lease termination letter complies with state legal requirements to provide notice that a rental agreement will end on a particular date. This is most common in a month-to-month rental situation, since most month-to-month agreements are open-ended and don’t specify a final date of termination. Most states also apply the same requirements to a situation with no written agreement where the tenant pays rent monthly (often called a “tenancy at will”). Lease termination letters can also be used at the end of a fixed-term lease by either the landlord or tenant. This is often done even when not a legal requirement, to prevent any ambiguity about lease status or move-out date. A few states also do require notice of termination even with a fixed-term lease.
A lease termination letter is the standard way to end the appropriate type of lease, and is NOT the same as a notice of early termination (used when either the landlord or the tenant have legal grounds to break a lease before its end date), or a notice to quit (an initial eviction letter given by the landlord to the tenant for a lease violation).
This is a basic outline for terminating a month-to-month rental agreement or providing notice of termination in states where it’s also legally required for fixed-term leases:
These are the month-to-month rental agreement and fixed-term lease termination notice requirements by state:
Month-to-Month | Fixed-Term | Leases with No End Date | |
Alabama | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Alaska | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Arizona | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Arkansas | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
California | 30 days | No state requirement | 60 days |
Colorado | 21 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Connecticut | 3 days | 3 days | 3 days |
Delaware | 60 days | 60 days | No state requirement |
Florida | 30 days [1] | 60 days | No state requirement |
Georgia | 30 days | No state requirement | 30 or 60 days |
Hawaii | 28 or 45 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Idaho | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Illinois | 30 days | 60 days | 60 days |
Indiana | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Iowa | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Kansas | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Kentucky | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Louisiana | 10 days | No state requirement (if lease isn’t extended) | No state requirement |
Maine | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Maryland | 30 days | 3 months | No state requirement |
Massachusetts | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Michigan | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Minnesota | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Mississippi | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Missouri | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Montana | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Nebraska | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Nevada | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
New Hampshire | 30 days | 30 days | 30 days |
New Jersey | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
New Mexico | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
New York | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
North Carolina | 7 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
North Dakota | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Ohio | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Oklahoma | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Oregon | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Pennsylvania | 15 days | 30 days | 15 days (if lease is >1 year) |
Rhode Island | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
South Carolina | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
South Dakota | 15 or 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Tennessee | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Texas | 30 days | No state requirement | At least one month |
Utah | 15 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Vermont | 60 or 90 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Virginia | 30 days | 3 months | 3 months |
Washington | 20 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Washington, DC | 30 days | 30 days | 30 days |
West Virginia | 30 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Wisconsin | 28 days | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Wyoming | No state requirement | No state requirement | No state requirement |
Larger cities often have special requirements for advance notice. For example, at the state level in Illinois, most tenancies may terminate with 30 days of notice, but the city of Chicago requires at least 120 days of notice to terminate tenancies that have lasted three years or longer. Check local notice requirements carefully.
Timing a lease termination letter can often be confusing for both tenants and landlords, because the notice typically takes effect on the next date that rent is due rather than the 30th day after the notice is given. A notice given in the middle of a rental period typically causes the lease to terminate at the end of the next rental period.
When rent is due on the first of the month, a 30-day termination letter given on September 10th will terminate the lease on November 1st. Terminating at the end of September would require notice delivered by August 31st at latest, to allow at least 30 days of notice before the end of the next rental period. Note that missing the timing just a few days can push termination off for an entire month , or more.
Month-to-month rental agreements normally end by sending a lease termination notice to the other party, using the appropriate amount of advance notice required by state law. Each lease termination letter should include the following:
The ideal method (in legal terms) for delivering a lease termination letter to the other party is hand delivery in person . This is the gold standard for delivery and will be accepted as a valid form of service in all states.
When hand delivery to the other party in person isn’t possible, most states will also accept hand delivery to a person of suitable age and discretion on the property, who can accept the notice on the other party’s behalf . For landlords delivering to tenants, this is preferably a member of the tenant’s family who lives on the rental property with the tenant.
If no form of hand delivery is possible, most states allow posting the notice at a conspicuous place on the property , such as the entry door, AND/OR delivering the notice by registered or certified mail with a return receipt to get signed confirmation of delivery to the other party.
While hand delivery in person is an acceptable form of service in all states, requirements can otherwise differ dramatically , including city to city within the same state. A lease won’t terminate without valid notice, so check state and local laws carefully to ensure full compliance.
A tenancy without a specific duration, as defined in s. 83.46(2) or (3) , may be terminated by either party giving written notice in the manner provided in s. 83.56(4) , as follows:
(1) When the tenancy is from year to year, by giving not less than 60 days’ notice prior to the end of any annual period; (2) When the tenancy is from quarter to quarter, by giving not less than 30 days’ notice prior to the end of any quarterly period; (3) When the tenancy is from month to month, by giving not less than 30 days’ notice prior to the end of any monthly period; and (4) When the tenancy is from week to week, by giving not less than 7 days’ notice prior to the end of any weekly period.
How Much Notice Is Required to Terminate a Lease? Lease termination notices vary based on lease type and state laws. In most states, there are no notice requirements for either party to end a fixed-term lease, the lease simply expires on the last day of the term. For month-to-month rental agreements, one month’s notice is typically required from either party. Be sure to check your lease and state requirements to find out when to provide notice. Read more » How Do You Write a Lease Termination Letter? When writing a lease termination notice letter, you should include: (1) Date. (2) Rental property address. (3) The date notice begins. (4) State notice requirements (in days). (5) Signature and printed name. Read more »