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This question is about Kansas Eviction Process Yes, you can kick someone out of your house in Kansas. If the person did not have the landlords permission to live in the home, and has no written or verbal lease, you can follow the Kansas trespass statutes to remove them instead of the eviction process.
Tenant Rights to Withhold Rent in Kansas Tenants may withhold rent if a landlord fails to take care of important repairs, such as a broken heater.
Excluded tenancies or licences Your landlord only needs to give reasonable notice to quit. Usually this means the length of the rental payment period so if you pay rent monthly, youll get one months notice. The notice does not have to be in writing.
To evict you, the landlord must provide a notice to you that you have 14 days to correct the problem, otherwise you will have to vacate 30 days after you get the notice. In other words, the lease will terminate 30 days after the notice date, unless you can correct the problem in 14 days.
Kansas law does not limit how much your rent can be raised or how often. Because a rent raise is similar to an eviction, there is one rule. If you have a month-to-month lease, your landlord must inform you, IN WRIT- ING, of a rent raise at least 30 days before the rent date when it is supposed to go into effect.
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People also ask

Kansas is a moderately landlord-friendly state. There are no rent control laws, and tenants are unable to withhold rent unless it is for repairs.
Yes, you can kick someone out of your house in Kansas. If the person did not have the landlords permission to live in the home, and has no written or verbal lease, you can follow the Kansas trespass statutes to remove them instead of the eviction process.
File a forcible detainer with the court. Serve your roommate. Go to trial. Get a writ of restitution if your roommate still wont leave.
The landlord can evict the tenant for a lease violation in Kansas. Even if the tenant has just violated one term, they can still be evicted. The landlord must give the tenant a Kansas eviction notice called a 30-Day Notice to Comply, which provides the tenant with 14 days to fix the issue.
Many leases will allow landlords to only give 30 days notice to terminate the lease, but will require the tenant to provide even more time (such as 60 days notice) before terminating the lease.

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