No, in order to enter the tenant's property for whatever reason, the landlord must give prior written notice; usually seven days.
Yes, a landlord can enter a tenants bedroom without permission during an inspection. However, in most lease contracts, they have to give the renter a 24-hour notice for inspection.
Contact your local postal inspector about this. It could be a violation of federal law.
If the landlord provided a key to the tenant, then the tenant must provide a key to the landlord. In fact, under most state laws the tenant may not change a lock without the landlord's permission and a duplicate key provided to the landlord.
You are not going to be arrested. But you can be taken into custody and returned to your parents.
The situation you describe is called a sublet. Read your lease to confirm that this is allowed as part of the agreement you have with your landlord. Of course, if you choose to collect rental revenue from people without your landlord's permission, and you're collecting rent based on the landlord's assets, you may be liable to the landlord to turn all monies over to him or her. Best practices indicate that it's always a better idea to behave within the bounds of the agreement you have with your landlord.
Yes it is normal for a landlord to have a spare set of keys. However the landlord can not enter the property without the tenant's permission, or serving notice to the tenant of a requirement for access.
In British Columbia a landlord may not come into a rented out accomodation without 24 hours notice and the permission of the tenant. No matter if it's shared or not, unless of course it is shared by the landlord...
Most laws state that you cannot change a lock without the landlord's permisson, and he will generally require a copy of the key, in this case, defeating the whole purpose. If you catch your landlord in your house without permission he is guilty of burglary just as anyone else would even if he had a key but not your permission to enter the unit or property.
Not without your permission.
No, a landlord may not enter your unit without reasonable notice (usually 24-48 hours) unless there is an emergency inside the unit.Emergencies are:Flooding, broken pipes.Fire, smoking coming out of the unit.
You should revisit your lease to determine whether you can sublet without the landlord's permission. Most of the time, you have to speak to the landlord before moving someone in your apartment or home.
A landlord can only go onto property unannounced to handle an emergency. In Pennsylvania, a landlord needs to give the tenant 24 hours notice to enter a property