Yes. If the rent is on a written lease then the lease must expire, and the landlord must give at least 30-days notice before the lease expires. If the rent is on a month-to-month basis, then the landlord must give a 30-day notice before the next rent is due. If the rent is on a weekly basis then the notice must be given at least one week before the rent is due.
If this is a month-to-month tenancy, a full month. Technically, the landlord needs to terminate the tenancy with at least a full month's notice, offering to start a new tenancy at the new rate.
Just give them 30 days of notice before the next rent is due to move out.
Prior to having the tenant sign, the landlord would insert the sentence into the lease, "The landlord reserves the right to terminate this lease with ninety days notice." Tenant may request the same terms, or take the tenancy as offered.
You should check with the clerk of the court ofr detailed information, but in any state a landlord has the right to enter property, provided he gives reasonable notice. State by state it varies - sometimes it has to be in writing and the length of notification can be as short as 24 hours or as long as a few days - but your local court can give you all the landlord/tenant laws. You may also be able to look up your state statutes online as well.
It would depend on the requirements of your new landlord. Since rents are ussually paid in advance it is not like the landlord is issuing credit. The landlord may want to validate the renter ablility to pay and payment history to insure the landlord is renting to someone he will not have to evict in 30 days. Contact the landlord and let hime/her understand your situation.
Yes. The landlord should give you at least 24 hours of notice to enter without your permission or have your permission. There may be local stipulations for the landlords, an example being that where I live, the landlord can show the apartment only in the month preceding the move out date.
If it is not in the written agreement then yes they must notify you within 60 days but if it is then no they do not have to.
He could if you lived there those days.
Landlord has to take you to court to get you out and then it will take 30 days before you have to be out.
A landlord can, at any time, initiate eviction proceedings against the tenant if he fails to pay his rent on time. Normally the landlord does this after the fifth day of default.
Usually up to 30 days
a landlord may not EVER break/violate a lease. [unless the tenant wishes it so]
In most states your landlord cannot raise the rent without at least 30 days of notice in writing. If a landlord essentially tells you by voice that he is raising the rent, or gives you too short notice, you can ignore the increase. If he files eviction proceedings you can bring up this matter as a defense in court.
At least 30 days before the next rent is due.
Just give them 30 days of notice before the next rent is due to move out.
Raising your blood pressure will increase pain. Yes.
No.
I can set up an event alert in Event Driven Notification and specify that I want an email sent to me two days before my statement needs approval