Notice of Default in Payment of Rent as Warning Prior to Demand to Pay or Terminate for Residential Property - Florida 2025

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In Florida, either the tenant or the landlord must provide written notice to terminate the lease. The notice period depends on the length of the tenancy and is typically 15 or 30 days. For tenancies of less than 1 year, a 15-day notice is required, while tenancies of 1 year or longer require a 30-day notice.
Terminating Tenancy The required documentation for this notice is the Three-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit. This notice cannot be given until the tenant is three days late with rent. You must exclude legal holidays, Saturdays, and Sundays in consideration of this three-day period.
3-Day Notice To have any legal effect, your notice to a non-paying tenant must clearly state the exact rent amount due and gives the renter three days to pay up. This 3 day period does not include holidays or weekends. The notice must say that their tenancy is terminated if the tenant doesnt pay within three days.
Nonpayment of Rent The landlord must serve the tenant a written notice allowing three days, excluding weekends and legal holidays, for the payment of the rent or vacating of the premises. If the tenant does not pay the rent or vacate, the landlord may begin legal action to evict.
Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes provides that the landlord serve the tenant with a written notice allowing three (3) days excluding weekends and legal holidays for the tenant to pay the rent or vacate the premises. If the rent is not paid within the three (3) days, the landlord may begin the eviction process.
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