Florida Notice to Lessor of Lessee's Intention not to Renew Lease

State:
Multi-State
Control #:
US-03263BG
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

A lease agreement may contain specific provisions authorizing renewal or extension, or a subsequent agreement or modification may grant the extension or renewal. A lease agreement may also grant an option to either a lessee or a lessor to renew or extend the term of the lease agreement.


This form is a generic example that may be referred to when preparing such a form for your particular state. It is for illustrative purposes only. Local laws should be consulted to determine any specific requirements for such a form in a particular jurisdiction.

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FAQ

When a tenant remains in possession of the rental after the agreement term expires they are considered a holdover tenant . Legally, they become a month-to-month tenant and all provisions of the original agreement remain in effect, including the requirement to provide 30 days written notice of their intent to vacate.

Florida law does not state how a notice must be served, so the lease must be examined. If the lease requires that the manager gives the resident 30 days' notice prior to the end of the lease term, that notice must be actually received by the resident no less than 30 days prior to the ending date.

In Florida, leases do not automatically renew unless the lease specifically states that it will. Barring any provision in the lease, the tenant is expected to vacate the premises and no warning or notice is required.

In most situations, a landlord is not required to extend or renew a lease. They can change any of the terms and conditions, including the rent price. They can also end ask you to leave the property when your lease is over and they don't need a reason.

Generally, a landlord may terminate a lease without reason at the expiration of the lease term. That means your landlord is under no obligation to renew your lease or allow you to stay in the property for additional time unless you are able to invoke an anti-retaliation law.

Although it may not be required by the lease and is certainly not required by Florida law, we highly recommend that the manager give a Notice of Non-renewal to the resident at least 30 days prior to the end of the lease.

Sample Lease Non-Renewal NoticeDear (Landlord/Tenant), I'm writing to inform you that I will not be renewing our lease. As noted in my contract, the unit will be vacant as of (lease end date). This note should serve as my (length appropriate) notice of non-renewal.

Generally, a landlord may terminate a lease without reason at the expiration of the lease term. That means your landlord is under no obligation to renew your lease or allow you to stay in the property for additional time unless you are able to invoke an anti-retaliation law.

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Florida Notice to Lessor of Lessee's Intention not to Renew Lease