Letter from Tenant to Landlord about Insufficient notice of rent increase - Maine 2025

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You can try to go to court and ask the court to force the landlord to continue to lease to you. But unless there is extenuating circumstances or violation of the law, the court will rule for the landlord.
Your landlord must give you either a 30-day or 7-day written notice to leave, or they can combine both of these into one notice. Any notice must advise you of your right to contest the eviction in court. This is called a Notice to Quit.
We have found this apartment comfortable and would not like to move out, but I fear we would be forced to do so if faced with such a large monthly rent payment. Since we have been good tenants and always pay our rent on time, we hope you will take our situation into account, and be kind enough to reconsider.
Yes. Your landlord must give written notice of any rent increase. If your landlord has increased the rent less than 10% in the last 12 months, the notice must be a 45 day notice. If the new rent increase means your landlord is raising rent more than 10% in any 12 month time period, the notice must be 75 days.
Landlords must provide a written notice if they decide not to renew a lease agreement. Maine laws typically require a 30-day notice period prior to the end of the lease term, allowing tenants adequate time to make arrangements for alternative housing.
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However, some jurisdictions, like California, require a 60-day notice for tenancies lasting a year or more.
A notice of rent increase letter should include the following: Your name and contact information. Date of document. A greeting that addresses each tenant by name. The propertys address. The date the original lease went into effect. The date the original lease will end. The current rent amount. The proposed new rent amount.

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