Letter from Landlord to Tenant as Notice to Tenant of Tenant's Disturbance of Neighbors' Peaceful Enjoyment to Remedy or Lease Terminates - Oregon 2025

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Letter from Landlord to Tenant as Notice to Tenant of Tenant's Disturbance of Neighbors' Peaceful Enjoyment to Remedy or Lease Terminates - Oregon Preview on Page 1

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering the date at the top of the document. This is crucial for establishing a timeline for any actions taken.
  3. Fill in the tenant’s name and address of the premises where they reside. Ensure accuracy to avoid any confusion.
  4. In the body of the letter, clearly state the breaches regarding disturbances. Be specific about what behaviors are causing issues.
  5. Indicate a deadline for remedying these issues, specifying how many days the tenant has to correct their behavior.
  6. Complete the landlord's signature section, including your name and title if applicable, ensuring it reflects your authority.
  7. Finally, choose a method for proof of delivery and sign accordingly. This ensures that you have documented communication with the tenant.

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Peace and Quiet Your rights as a tenant include the right to quiet enjoyment, a legal term. This means your landlord cannot evict you without cause or otherwise disturb your right to live in peace and quiet. If other tenants in your building are disturbing you, you should complain to the landlord.
Landlords cannot bypass legal procedures for evictions, raise rent without notice, ignore health and safety codes, or enter a tenants home without providing written notice.
Oregon has three kinds of termination notices: (1) No Cause Notices, (2) For Cause Notices, and (3) Landlord Cause Notices. Your landlord must give you one of these kinds of notices if they want you to move out of your rental.
The primary basis to all leases is the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. This covenant ensures that possessions will not be disturbed by someone with a superior legal title to the land, including the landlord. Unless the lease states otherwise, there is an assumption that the tenant has a duty to pay rent.
Knowing what a landlord cannot do helps keep the rental relationship respectful and within legal boundaries. Landlords cannot bypass legal procedures for evictions, raise rent without notice, ignore health and safety codes, or enter a tenants home without providing written notice.
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Landlord Notice Requirement: Must give at least 2 months notice, aligned with rental periods, under Section 21. This remains the statutory minimum until the Renters Rights Bill is enacted. Tenants Notice Requirement: Must give at least 1 months notice (if rent is paid monthly) or 4 weeks notice (if paid weekly).
Reasons for terminating a tenancy for cause include, but are not limited to: material bdocHub of the rental agreement or ORS 90.325 (ORS 90.392), failure to pay rent (ORS 90.394) and outrageous conduct by a tenant (ORS 90.396). Each of these for cause terminations has its own notice requirements.

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