Letter from Tenant to Landlord about Insufficient Notice to Terminate Rental Agreement - Missouri 2025

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Dear [LANDLORD OR PROPERTY MANAGER], You are hereby notified of my/our intention to terminate the rental agreement and vacate the residence at [ADDRESS, UNIT #, CITY, STATE, ZIP] on [MOVE-OUT DATE]. I am/we are providing this 30-day notice to satisfy the lease requirements and the law.
Dear (Landlords Name), I am writing to formally notify you of my intent to vacate the premises located at (Rental Property Address) on (Move-Out Date). This notice is being given in ance with the (30-day/60-day) notice requirement outlined in our lease agreement. My last day of residence will be (Move-Out Date).
However, some jurisdictions, like California, require a 60-day notice for tenancies lasting a year or more.
If you had no lease then you are automatically bound by a month to month lease which you are required to provide on 30 days notice in order to move out. If any part of my answer does not make sense to you, please, do not hesitate to ask for clarifications.
An oral agreement obligates the landlord and tenant for only one month. A landlord can evict the tenant or raise rent with only one months notice. Likewise, the tenant can give notice to vacate on one months notice. (One months notice means a full calendar month, and must include a full rental period.
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For fixed-term leases, Missouri law requires landlords to provide advance written notice of non-renewal between 30-60 days prior to the end date, depending on the length of the tenancy. If proper notice is not given, the lease automatically renews month-to-month.
Privacy and respect. Your landlord may not enter your residence without your permission or reasonable advance notice. Discrimination. A landlord may not deny you housing or treat you differently from other tenants because of your race, color, national origin, sex, disability, religion or family status.

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