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Commonly Asked Questions about Maryland Lease Agreements

A Maryland lease termination letter (60-day notice) is required to terminate a rental agreement that renews monthly. Both landlords and tenants must issue a notice of intent to terminate, with the former obligated to provide the notice at least 60 days before the termination date.
Week to Week Leases While uncommon, these short-term leases require a notice period of at least 7 days if the tenant plans to vacate. Month-to Month Leases Typically, a month-to-month lease requires landlords to provide 60-days notice depending on the terms of the agreement.
The tenant must give written notice, as required by the lease, generally one month for single-family units and two months for multi-family units.
If tenants are on a yearly lease agreement, Maryland law mandates that the landlord provide a 90-day advance notice before the rent increase becomes effective. Month-to-Month Tenancies: For month-to-month leases, a landlord must give tenants at least one months advance notice before the increase.
Proper Notice State laws require the landlord to provide a 30-day notice for a month-to-month lease. Traditionally, the base tenancy is the period of notification, so week-to-week leases generally require a seven-day notice. For yearly leases, the landlord should give a three-month notice.
Non-renewal of the lease after the rental period ends In Maryland, landlords cannot evict tenants or force them to vacate the property without probable cause. As long as the tenant does not violate any rules, they can stay until their rental period ends.
Do I have to docHub my Maryland rental lease agreement? In Maryland, rental contracts do not have to be docHubd. A lease is a legal contract as long as it has been signed and agreed upon by the tenant and landlord. If your tenant bdocHubes the agreement, you could enlist the help of licensed attorneys.
If a landlord does not want to renew a tenants lease, the landlord must provide a 60-day notice to vacate. This requirement applied to month-to-month leases, long term leases, multifamily and/or single family rentals. The landlord is not required to state a reason for the notice.