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.
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 the rent is due every week, then the landlord usually must give a week's notice before the next rent is due; if it's every month, then a month's notice is given before the next rent is due.
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.
As long as the landlord is in legal possession/ownership of the property and as long as you are residing on/in his property, yes. His notice of default has no legal effect of putting a "stay" on your payment of rent.
If it's a month-to-month tenancy then the landlord must give you at least a month's notice BEFORE the next rent is due, before he can increase it. If the rent term is week to week, then at least a week's notice is given BEFORE the next rent is due. Now, if the term is a defined term on a lease, then the rent increase cannot take effect before the lease expires by which time a minimum of 30-day notice must be given.
This might depend on what state you are in, but, in every state I know of, you can get a Notice to Quit if the rent is a day late.
Not if this is a standard landlord-tenant situation (hotels, motels, etc. don't fall into this category). In a month-to-month tenancy, notice must be given at least 15-days before the rent is due, for violation of lease terms; 7-day notice before rent due, for more egregious violations; or 30-day notice before rent due under normal circumstances.
One full rental period. So, if the rent is due on the first, the notice should be given by the last day of the month, to move at the end of the next month. If the rent is due on the 15th, notice by August 14 means move by September 14. If the rent isn't paid, that's a different notice, depending on the laws of the state.
Sure, as long as they give a full rental period notice.
It depends on the rent agreement you signed when you moved it. Usually you have to give a set period of notice BEFORE you move out. If YOU waive or break the notice period, you should expect to be charged for it. The reason for giving your landlord notice - is to give them time to advertise for a new tenant, so he doesn't lose out on rent while the property is empty.
Well, what's a contract versus a lease? A contract may not be a lease. If this is the case then the rent can be increased given proper notice (for example if you pay by the month then your landlord must give you notice of at least 30 days before the next rent is due). If the contract is actually a lease then the landlord normally cannot increase the rent until the lease expires, and must give you proper notice of such increase (at least 30 days before the next rent is due).