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The landlord can change the rent amount for a tenancy subsequent to the agreement term by providing 60 days' written notice to the tenant of the change. A landlord can never change the rent amount during the agreement term.
Landlords and tenants in Georgia have different notice requirements. Landlords must always give 60-days' notice to terminate any lease. Tenants, on the other hand, only need to provide 30 days' notice in both cases.
If there is a tenancy-at-will, the landlord must give the tenant sixty (60) days' notice telling them to leave. If the landlord is willing to allow the tenant to remain but wishes to begin charging rent, the tenant must be given sixty (60) days' notice to start a new tenancy-at-will requiring rent payments.
If you have no lease agreement, and just pay your rent every month, you are considered a tenant-at-will. Under Georgia law, the landlord is required to give you a notice of at least 60 days before requiring you to move out. After that, you can be evicted.
You may be able to legally move out before the lease term ends in the following situations.You Are Starting Active Military Duty.The Rental Unit Is Unsafe or Violates Georgia Health or Safety Codes.Your Landlord Harasses You or Violates Your Privacy Rights.
If a new lease is not signed, and the landlord continues to accept monthly rent, the terms of the original lease still apply, except the landlord is required to give sixty (60) days' notice before she can terminate the lease or change the terms, and you are required to give thirty (30) days' notice before leaving.
Georgia law says that a landlord cannot make a tenant make or pay for repairs, unless that tenant, his/her family or guests caused the damage. For serious repair problems, local housing code departments can inspect for possible violations.
For a landlord to terminate a tenancy early, the landlord must have cause, or a legal reason. In Georgia, those legal reasons are failing to pay rent or violating the terms of the lease or rental agreement.
Landlords cannot evict a tenant without receiving a court order. It is illegal for a landlord to try to evict a tenant through any other means, such as shutting off utilities (see OCGA § 44-7-14.1) or changing the locks at the rental unit. Such actions are called self-help evictions.