In Arizona, your tenant will have to provide you with a written notice letter, and the time they have to do it will depend on the type of lease. Monthly Lease - 30 days or more. Weekly Lease - 10 days or more.
Under Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) § 33-1375, either the landlord or the tenant can terminate a month-to-month lease with a 30-day written notice.
There is no law regulating what kind of advance notice, if any, is required to stay on or vacate when the lease ends. On occasion a lease will state that it automatically renews unless either party gives notice otherwise. More frequently, a 30-day or 60-day notice must be provided by one party to the other.
Tenants can break a lease in Arizona as long as they meet one of the requirements we'll explain below: Uninhabitable Unit. Active Military Duty. Early Lease Termination Clause. Landlord Harassment. Domestic Violence.
The notice typically includes the address of the rental property, a clear statement of intent to end the lease, and the effective date of termination, which should be at least 30 days from the date of the document. Signatures of the parties involved are necessary to validate the termination letter.
The landlord tenant laws that allow you to break a lease are different from state to state. In many places, you can get out of your lease without penalty for a number of reasons, such as domestic violence, an unsafe environment, or if you've been called up for military service.