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Nevada is one of several states that allow tenants to break a lease for any reason and will not hold renters responsible for the entire amount of the remaining lease. Under Nevada Revised Statute 118.175, the landlord must make their "reasonable best efforts" to re-rent the unit as quickly as possible.
As a tenant, you can terminate your tenancy (whether fixed-term or periodic) without giving a reason, but you must provide a valid notice of termination to your landlord. In order to be valid, this notice must: Be in writing. Be signed by you.
Nevada law requires a thirty-day notice to the tenant (or a seven-day notice if the tenant pays rent weekly), followed by a second five-day Notice to Quit for Unlawful Detainer (after the first notice period has elapsed) instructing the tenant to leave because tenant's presence is now unlawful.
You must give your landlord written notice of your intent to terminate your tenancy for military reasons. Once the notice is mailed or delivered, your tenancy will terminate 30 days after the date that rent is next due, even if that date is several months before your lease expires.
Can a landlord break a lease in Nevada? A landlord in Nevada is allowed to break a lease if a tenant intentionally damages the property and/or doesn't comply with the rental agreement, such as not paying rent on time. In either case, a landlord is required to give notice to a tenant.
Landlord in breach of tenancy agreementIf the landlord breaches your tenancy agreement and the breach is serious enough, you may be able to terminate the tenancy agreement. There are two ways to terminate a tenancy agreement on a serious breach by your landlord.
Nevada is one of several states that allow tenants to break a lease for any reason and will not hold renters responsible for the entire amount of the remaining lease. Under Nevada Revised Statute 118.175, the landlord must make their "reasonable best efforts" to re-rent the unit as quickly as possible.
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.
Once the notice is mailed or delivered, your tenancy will terminate 30 days after the date that rent is next due, even if that date is several months before your lease expires.
State law regulates several rent-related issues, including late and bounced-check fees, the amount of notice (at least 45 days in Nevada) landlords must give tenants to raise the rent, and how much time (five days in Nevada) a tenant has to pay overdue rent or move before a landlord can file for eviction.