Washington Notice Terminate Tenancy With 60 Days

State:
Washington
Control #:
WA-1252LT
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

This form is for use by a Landlord to terminate a month-to-month non-residential lease. "Non-Residential" includes commercial, industrial, etc. property. Unless a written agreement provides otherwise, the Landlord does not have to have a reason for terminating the Lease in this manner, other than a desire to end the lease. A month-to-month lease is one which continues from month-to-month unless either party chooses to terminate. Unless a written agreement provides for a longer notice, 30 days notice is required prior to termination in this state. The notice must be given to the Tenant within at least 30 days prior to the termination date. The form indicates that the Landlord has chosen to terminate the lease, and states the deadline date by which the Tenant must vacate the premises.

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How to fill out Washington 30 Day Notice To Terminate Month To Month Tenancy - Nonresidential From Landlord To Tenant?

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FAQ

I wish to inform you that I will be terminating my lease on [date you plan to terminate]. This letter provides the necessary notice of [required notice] as outlined in the lease. I will move out my belongings and return my keys to [address of property management office] by [date you plan to terminate].

An eviction notice must first be served properly and the tenant must have failed to comply, pay, or vacate within the specified timeframe. This must happen before the landlord can begin the eviction court process by serving you an ?unlawful detainer? eviction lawsuit, called a Summons & Complaint.

Month-to-month tenants must be given written notice of at least 20 days before the end of the rental period that their landlord is terminating their tenancy. 20-day notices are also sometimes called ?no cause? notices.

What is a 60-Day Notice? It is a notice from your landlord that you may need to move out within 60 days. Here is when your landlord can give you this type of notice: Your landlord has a "business or economic reason" to no longer rent the place.

The 90-Day Notice is one type of this notice. If you are still living in the place after 90 days, the landlord may then start an eviction court case. The landlord must deliver court documents to you and win that court case. At the court hearing a judge has to sign an order directing the sheriff to evict you.

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Washington Notice Terminate Tenancy With 60 Days