Your local landlord/tenant law will state the procedures for eviction and the amount of time from when notice is first given until the tenant must be out, before a court order can be obtained to physically remove them.
It could be anywhere from 14 days to several months, not including any delays for related hearings on counterclaims (such as fraud, health-code violations, etc).
Unable to answer. This time-frame varies from state to state and even municipality to municipality. Check with your local authorities.
The notice period is generally 30 days. However, the time may vary in different jurisdictions. You need to check the required notice period in your particular jurisdiction.
Once the lease has been signed, none.
If you want your tenants to vacate your property, assuming there are no "just cause" eviction laws in your community, you must give them written notice to leave. Such a notice must give them 20 days to vacate in most states, or, for non-payment of rent when due, 3 days (check your state's laws). If the tenants still refuse to leave, and the time period of the notice expires, you must start an eviction lawsuit against your tenants. See the Related Questions below.
180 days
If you have a lease your landlord would have to take you to court to have you kicked out of the apartment. If you are a month to month tenant then the landlord can request that you vacate with 30 days notice.
Under the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act, tenants generally have at least 90 days to vacate after foreclosure. In most cases, tenants with longer-term leases may stay until the end of the lease.
Once the tenant receives the notice, they have three days to vacate or the proceedings for the unlawful detainer begin.
None...but the new owner must give them 30 days to vacate the property...
This is official notification that you, the Tenant, have three days to pay the rent or vacate the premises (a landlord can't give you three days' notice just to vacate). If you don't vacate the premises, or you don't catch up on your rent (including any late fees if applicable) by then, the landlord can file eviction proceedings against you (take you to court and ask a judge to force you out of your home).
Yes. 30 days include a full month including weekends.
There's no law that says the bank has to take the tenant's money. However, the Federal Protection of Tenants in Foreclosure Act requires the bank to give tenants 90 days to vacate.
A 30 day notice is simply a notice that you will vacate in about 30 days. It does not exempt you from paying your rent on time.
Most leases have provisions for the owner giving notice if the tenants need to move. Usually it is 30 to 60 days and is written. Of course, it is more convenient to just not renew the lease. It may be cheaper and easier for you to move into an apartment in the interim and let the lease run its course.
"I live in and {APARTMENT} here in {MANCHESTER, KY} and all of the notice that I have to give my landlady is a 30 day notice."