This is an official Minnesota court form for use in a housing case, a Release of Rent. USLF amends and updates these forms as is required by Minnesota Statutes and Law.
This is an official Minnesota court form for use in a housing case, a Release of Rent. USLF amends and updates these forms as is required by Minnesota Statutes and Law.
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Contact your landlord. Explain to your landlord your circumstances and ask if it is possible to break the lease. Offer to assist the landlord in finding a new tenant. If your landlord agrees to let you out of the lease, be sure to get the agreement in writing.
Tenants may withhold rent or exercise the right to repair and deduct if a landlord fails to take care of important repairs, such as a broken heater. For specifics, see Minnesota Tenant Rights to Withhold Rent or Repair and Deduct.
A landlord cannot evict a tenant without an adequately obtained eviction notice and sufficient time. A landlord cannot retaliate against a tenant for a complaint. A landlord cannot forego completing necessary repairs or force a tenant to do their own repairs.A landlord cannot remove a tenant's personal belongings.
Under Minnesota law, a landlord must return the tenant's security deposit within three weeks after the tenant has surrendered the rental property to the landlord (that is, returned the keys and vacated the property) and the landlord has received the tenant's forwarding address; but within five days if the tenant must
For at-will tenants, once rent is past due, the landlord must provide a 14-Day Notice to Quit, if the landlord wants to file an eviction action with the court. This notice gives the tenant the option move out of the rental unit within 14 days in order to avoid eviction.