Notice of Breach of Written Lease for Violating Specific Provisions of Lease with No Right to Cure for Residential Property from Landlord to Tenant - Georgia 2025

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A lease is a contract. A tenant or landlord breaches a lease when they fail to abide by the terms of the contract. A tenant cannot simply move out before the end of the lease without consequences. A landlord cannot end a lease early without going through proper eviction procedures.
If a tenant is in a month-to-month tenancy and the landlord wishes to end the tenancy, the landlord needs to give the tenant a written 60-day notice. This notice will inform the tenant that the landlord is terminating the tenancy and the tenant must move out of the rental unit by the end of 60 days.
As for consequences, you will be charged 1 or 2 months worth of rent to satisfy the move out notice period. More than likely, they will deduct it from your security deposit. If you owe a remaining amount after your security deposit was applied, they could sue you for the unpaid balance in court.
Georgia Law A tenancy at will can be terminated with notice of 60 days from the landlord or 30 days from the tenant (O.C.G.A. 44-7-7). However, current Georgia regulations of Personal Care Homes allow for a landlord to give a notice of 30 days prior to terminating a residential agreement (Ga.
Once the tenant is found to be in violation of the contract, they are sent a lease violation notice. This written notice informs the tenant of the lease term or policy that they failed to follow. The tenant must also remedy the problem within a given time period.

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The process to sue your landlord, is the same as suing anyone else. Go to the local county court house, complete the required paperwork including reason for the suit, specify the monetary damages and pay the fees. This type of case is usually assigned to landlord/tenant court.

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