Answer · 2026 · overview

Landlord notice requirements: an overview by notice type

The short answer

Landlords generally must give written notice for rent-related actions, lease violations, entry to the unit, renewals, and lease termination — but the exact timing, wording, and delivery method are set by each state (and sometimes city), and getting them wrong can invalidate the action. This is a plain-language overview of the common notice types, not legal advice — always confirm your state and local rules.

The common landlord notice types

NoticeTimingWhat it's for
Rent reminderBefore due dateA courtesy reminder that rent is coming due (not a legal demand).
Late-rent / pay-or-quitSet by stateDemands overdue rent within a legally defined window before further action.
Lease violation (cure-or-quit)Set by stateNotifies the tenant of a lease breach and the time allowed to fix it.
Notice to enterSet by stateAdvance written notice before entering for non-emergency repairs or showings.
Rent increaseSet by stateAdvance notice of a rent change, with minimums that vary by jurisdiction.
Lease renewal offerBefore lease endOffers to extend the tenancy, often well before the current term ends.
Non-renewal / terminationSet by stateEnds the tenancy at lease end; timing and grounds are strictly regulated.
Important: the required number of days, the exact language, and how a notice must be delivered are governed by state and local law and differ from place to place. This overview is for general information only and is not legal advice. Confirm the rules for your specific state and city, and consult a qualified attorney for anything that could end a tenancy.

Why the details matter so much

Notices are legal instruments. A late notice sent a day early, a pay-or-quit with the wrong cure period, or a termination served the wrong way can be thrown out — and in an eviction, a defective notice can send you back to the start. That's why the safest practice is to use the correct state-specific template for each notice type, serve it the way your state requires, and keep dated proof that it was sent.

How KAYA handles it: KAYA sends routine notices — rent reminders, late notices, renewal offers — automatically using state-specific templates, and archives each one to the tenant's record as a compliance trail. Notices that end a tenancy, such as non-renewal or pay-or-quit, are held for the owner to approve rather than sent automatically — because those carry the most legal weight.

Frequently asked questions

Do landlord notices have to be in writing?

Usually, yes — late-rent, pay-or-quit, lease-violation, entry, rent-increase, and termination notices are generally required in writing, with delivery rules that vary by state. Confirm your local requirement; this isn't legal advice.

How much notice to enter a unit?

Most states require advance written notice before non-emergency entry, but the exact amount is set by state and sometimes local law. Check your state statute.

What if a notice is done wrong?

An improperly served or worded notice can be invalid and can delay or defeat an action like an eviction. Use the correct state template and document delivery.

Does KAYA handle notices?

Yes — routine notices go out automatically from state-specific templates and are logged. Tenancy-ending notices are held for owner approval.

Send the right notice, on time, every time

KAYA automates routine notices from state-specific templates and keeps the compliance trail — while leaving the tenancy-ending ones for you to approve.