Free Eviction Notice Template: Download & Customize
Serving the correct eviction notice is the critical first step in legally removing a tenant. Use the wrong notice type, miss a required element, or serve it incorrectly, and your entire eviction case can be thrown out — costing you weeks of lost rent and starting over from scratch.
This guide provides free eviction notice templates for the three main types of notices landlords use, plus detailed instructions on how to customize and serve them properly in any state.
⚡ Key Point: An eviction notice is NOT the same as an eviction. The notice is step 1 — it gives the tenant a chance to fix the problem (pay rent, cure a violation) before you file in court. You cannot skip this step.
3 Types of Eviction Notices
Before downloading a template, you need to know which type of notice to use. Using the wrong one can invalidate your case.
1. Pay or Quit Notice (Nonpayment of Rent)
The most common eviction notice. You serve this when a tenant hasn't paid rent by the due date. It gives the tenant a specific number of days to pay the full amount owed or move out.
- When to use: Rent is late and past any grace period in your lease
- Notice period: Varies by state — 3 days (TX, CA, FL) to 14 days (MA, MN, WA)
- Curable? Yes — if the tenant pays in full within the notice period, the eviction stops
2. Cure or Quit Notice (Lease Violation)
Used when a tenant violates a lease term that can be fixed — unauthorized pets, noise violations, unauthorized occupants, or property damage. It gives the tenant time to fix ("cure") the violation.
- When to use: Tenant violates a lease term that can reasonably be corrected
- Notice period: Typically 7-30 days depending on state
- Curable? Yes — tenant can fix the violation to stop the eviction
3. Unconditional Quit Notice (No Cure Possible)
The most serious notice. Used for severe violations where the tenant must leave — no option to fix the problem. Typically reserved for illegal activity, repeated violations, or severe property damage.
- When to use: Illegal activity on premises, repeated lease violations (after a cure or quit was already served), or severe property damage
- Notice period: Immediate to 30 days depending on state and violation type
- Curable? No — tenant must vacate by the deadline
| Notice Type | Common Timeframes | Tenant Can Fix? | Use For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pay or Quit | 3-14 days | Yes (pay rent) | Unpaid rent |
| Cure or Quit | 7-30 days | Yes (fix violation) | Lease violations |
| Unconditional Quit | 0-30 days | No | Severe/illegal violations |
Pay or Quit Notice Template
Use this template when a tenant hasn't paid rent. Customize the bracketed fields for your situation and state requirements.
Cure or Quit Notice Template
Use this when a tenant violates a lease term that can be corrected (unauthorized pets, noise, etc.).
Unconditional Quit Notice Template
Use this for severe violations where the tenant must leave with no option to fix the problem.
How to Properly Serve an Eviction Notice
A perfectly written notice is worthless if you don't serve it correctly. Improper service is the #1 reason eviction cases get dismissed.
Acceptable Service Methods (Check Your State)
- Personal delivery: Hand the notice directly to the tenant. The strongest method — hardest for them to dispute.
- Substituted service: If the tenant isn't home, give it to another adult at the property, then mail a copy.
- Post and mail: Tape the notice to the door AND mail a copy via certified mail with return receipt.
- Certified mail only: Some states allow this as the sole method. Always get a return receipt.
🔑 Pro Tip: Even if your state allows "post and mail," always try personal delivery first. It's the most bulletproof method and hardest for a tenant to challenge in court. Bring a witness or take a timestamped photo.
Documentation Checklist
- Keep a copy of every notice you serve
- Note the date, time, and method of service
- If serving in person, bring a witness (another adult who can testify if needed)
- Take a photo of the posted notice with a timestamp
- Keep certified mail receipts and return receipts
- Fill out the Proof of Service section on your notice
Notice Periods by State
Every state has different notice requirements. Using the wrong timeframe will invalidate your notice. Here are the most common states:
| State | Pay or Quit | Cure or Quit | Month-to-Month End |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | 3 days | 3 days | 30-60 days |
| Texas | 3 days | 3 days | 30 days |
| Florida | 3 days | 7 days | 15 days |
| New York | 14 days | 30 days | 30-90 days |
| Illinois | 5 days | 10 days | 30 days |
| Georgia | Immediate | Immediate | 60 days |
| Ohio | 3 days | 30 days | 30 days |
| Pennsylvania | 10 days | 15-30 days | 15-30 days |
| Washington | 14 days | 10 days | 20 days |
| Colorado | 10 days | 10 days | 21 days |
📋 Need your state's specific eviction process? See our complete eviction guide for all 50 states.
Common Mistakes That Invalidate Your Notice
- Wrong notice period: Using a 3-day notice in a state that requires 7 days will get your case thrown out.
- Wrong notice type: Using an unconditional quit for a curable violation when your state requires a cure or quit first.
- Vague language: "You violated the lease" isn't specific enough. Name the exact lease clause and describe the violation in detail.
- Wrong amount: On a pay or quit notice, the amount must be exactly what's owed in rent — no late fees, no damages, no utility charges (unless your state specifically allows it).
- Improper service: Texting or emailing the notice isn't valid in most states. Follow your state's required service methods.
- Not counting days correctly: Many states exclude the day of service. Some exclude weekends and holidays. Check your state's rules.
- Accepting rent after notice: If you accept partial or full rent after serving the notice, you may waive your right to proceed. Once you serve a pay or quit, don't accept anything less than the full amount.
Prevent Evictions Before They Start
The best eviction is the one you never have to file. Learn proven tenant screening, lease writing, and retention strategies.
Get the complete playbook with 50+ templates → $197 (30-day guarantee)After Serving the Notice: What Happens Next?
If the Tenant Complies
Great news — no court needed. If they pay the rent or fix the violation within the notice period, the matter is resolved. Document the resolution and keep your records.
If the Tenant Does Nothing
Once the notice period expires without compliance, you can file an eviction case (unlawful detainer, forcible entry and detainer, or summary possession — terminology varies by state) in your local court. See our complete eviction process guide for the full court procedure.
If the Tenant Disputes the Notice
They may claim the notice is invalid, the amount is wrong, or they have a defense (habitability issues, retaliation, discrimination). This is why proper documentation is essential — your meticulous records will be your best evidence in court.
Digital vs. Paper Notices
While technology makes everything easier, eviction notices should always be served on paper using your state's approved methods. Here's why:
- Most states don't recognize email or text as valid service methods for eviction notices
- Paper creates a physical record that's harder to dispute
- Certified mail provides proof of delivery through USPS
- Judges are accustomed to paper notices and may question digital-only service
That said, you can also send the notice via email or text as a courtesy — just don't rely on it as your primary service method.
When to Hire an Attorney
You can handle most straightforward evictions yourself using these templates, but consider hiring an attorney if:
- Your state has complex eviction procedures (NY, CA, NJ, MA)
- The tenant has legal representation
- The tenant raises discrimination or retaliation claims
- You're evicting from a rent-controlled unit
- The tenant is in a protected class or has Section 8 vouchers
- You manage multiple properties and need standardized processes