Notice of Intent to Vacate at End of Specified Lease Term from Tenant to Landlord for Residential Property - Kansas 2025

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No matter the circumstances, your landlord is not allowed to evict you by themselves. Whenever your landlord wants to evict you, they must either have your agreement or get a court order.
A landlord who wants to end a month-to-month tenancy without cause can give the tenant a 30-day notice. This notice will inform the tenant that the landlord wishes to end the month-to-month tenancy and that the tenant must move out of the rental unit in 30 days.
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. Lease violations include: Illegal activity. Damage to the rental unit.
- 3-Day Notice: Non-payment of rent or lease violations. - 30-60 Day Notice: For no-fault evictions. Landlords can file if the tenant fails to comply with the notice. The tenant must be served with the Summons and Complaint.
The law requires that notice to terminate a rental contract must be given in writing. No specific legal format is required but a registered letter is the surest way. This notice must be sent by post three (complete) months before the date of the end of the lease.

People also ask

A notice to vacate is written when either party decides to end the relationship (for a good or bad reason or none at all). An eviction requires court action to remove the tenant from the property.
What is a notice to vacate? A notice to vacate is a legal written document from a landlord to a tenant or vice versa that informs the other party of a move-out date from an apartment, condo, house, or any residential rental property. A notice to vacate letter provides the tenant adequate time to prepare for their move.

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