4 Day Notice to Remedy Reoccurring Breach or Lease Terminates - Week-to-Week Tenancy - Other than Nonpayment of Rent - Residential - Oregon 2025

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How to use or fill out 4 Day Notice to Remedy Reoccurring Breach or Lease Terminates - Week-to-Week Tenancy - Other than Nonpayment of Rent - Residential - Oregon

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by filling in the 'TO' field with the tenant's name and the 'FROM' field with your name as the landlord.
  3. In the 'Address of Leased Premises' section, enter the complete address of the rental property.
  4. Describe the specific non-compliance issue in detail where indicated, ensuring clarity for both parties.
  5. Fill in the date of the previous notice regarding similar non-compliance, along with its corresponding day and year.
  6. Specify the termination date by calculating four days from when this notice is received by the tenant.
  7. Complete any additional fields such as your contact information and sign at the bottom to finalize.

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(See Oregon law ORS 90.320.) That means the landlord must have your rental unit clean and in good working order when you move in. The landlord must also provide: Protection from water and weather (full insulation is not required);
The landlord may terminate the tenancy during the fixed term only for cause and with notice as described in ORS 86.782 (Sale of property) (6)(c), 90.380 (Effect of rental of dwelling in violation of building or housing codes) (5), 90.392 (Termination of tenancy for cause), 90.394 (Termination of tenancy for failure to
In most jurisdictions this is a 60-day notice; in others, including Portland and Milwaukie, a 90-day notice is required. Additionally, a landlord can issue a no cause termination notice after the first year of occupancy if: 1.
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.
Under a recently enacted law, HB 3522, which goes into effect in 2026, landlords can utilize the Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) process to evict squatters. This marks a docHub shift in landlord-tenant law and provides property owners with a more streamlined method for reclaiming their property.
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If you rent month-to-month: If your rent is more than five days late: Your landlord must give you at least 13 days to move out. But, if you pay the rent you owe before the 13 days are up, you can stay and keep renting. If your rent is more than eight days late: Your landlord can give you only 10 days to move out.
A week-to-week rental period requires a ten-day notice. A fixed-term tenancy automatically ends on the last day specified in the signed rental agreement and cannot be altered unless the landlord or tenant has cause to end it.
You can usually give notice at any time, unless you have a break clause or a tenancy agreement that says otherwise. The notice you give has to end on the first or last day of your tenancy period.

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