Notice of Breach of Written Lease for Violating Specific Provisions of Lease with Right to Cure for Residential Property from Landlord to Tenant - Nebraska 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering the tenant's name(s) in the designated area at the top of the form. This ensures that the notice is correctly addressed.
  3. Next, fill in your name as the landlord and provide the address of the leased premises. This information is crucial for clarity and legal purposes.
  4. Identify and specify the lease provision(s) that have been violated. Clearly stating this helps in maintaining transparency.
  5. In the section provided, explain why the tenant is in breach of these provisions. Be concise yet thorough to avoid misunderstandings.
  6. Indicate how many days (fill in the blank) the tenant has to cure the breach before eviction proceedings may begin.
  7. Sign and date the notice at the bottom, ensuring you include your title if applicable.
  8. Complete the proof of delivery section by selecting how you delivered this notice (hand, registered mail, or posting). Sign and print your name here as well.

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A landlord must use the 14-day/30-day notice for any bdocHub except nonpayment of rent. Common causes for 14-day/30-day notices are keeping pets when the lease says no pets, loud parties that cause neighbors to report noise complaints, and illegal activity (such as illegal drugs) in the unit, among others.
A bdocHub of a commercial lease occurs when either the landlord or the tenant fails to comply with the terms stipulated in the lease agreement. Common bdocHubes by tenants include non-payment of rent, unauthorized alterations to the property, subletting without permission, and violating usage clauses.
In most states, you are allowed to evict tenants without a motive, meaning a no-cause notice to vacate would be accepted. Certain state laws, such as Californian law, restrict tenant evictions, and a no-cause notice to vacate is not accepted until you give a specific reason.
If the court decides that you bdocHubed the lease, it could order you to pay damages, legal costs and ask you to put right any bdocHub if it is possible to do so. The landlord may also try to evict you, which is called forfeiture (seeking possession).
The 14-day/30-day notice must say how the tenant is bdocHubing the lease and that the lease will automatically terminate 30 days (or more) from the date of the notice unless the tenant fixes the problem within 14 days of the date of the notice.
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A cure or quit notice is a written demand from a landlord directing a tenant to stop violating a lease provision within a specified period or face eviction. The time allowed to cure the violation is determined by state landlord-tenant statutes or the lease agreement.

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