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If a tenant who was the sole occupant of a rental dies during their lease, a representative of their estate can end their lease early. The representative must provide written notice to the landlord under Section 92.0162 of the Texas Property Code .
You can end the lease by giving your landlord a month's notice. However, the landlord can also end the lease by giving you a month's notice. If this happens unexpectedly, you may need to find a new home quickly.
Sec. 91.001. NOTICE FOR TERMINATING CERTAIN TENANCIES. (a) A monthly tenancy or a tenancy from month to month may be terminated by the tenant or the landlord giving notice of termination to the other.
A Texas lease termination notice is a document which officially announces the upcoming end of a rental tenancy. Either a landlord or tenant may give notice, in most cases at least 30 days in advance.
If you have not paid your rent or violate other provisions in your lease, you may receive a notice to vacate, which is a notice that the owner intends to file an eviction case in Justice of the Peace (JP) Court.
You should always give notice if you want to terminate your lease (even if it’s the end of your lease period). Almost all written leases say that at the expiration date, the lease is automatically renewed on a month-to-month basis unless one of the parties terminates the lease.
Advance notice requirements. You should check your rental agreement to see if it requires you to give the landlord advance notice that you are moving. Many leases require a 30-day notice as a condition of returning your deposit.
This section discusses Texas laws that govern moving out of a rental, including ending a lease agreement, getting a security deposit back, and dealing with a property left in a rental. Jump to a topic: Ending the Lease | Security Deposits | Tenant's Property.
A Texas lease termination letter form is a legal document that may be completed and delivered by either a landlord or tenant to serve a 30-day notice to vacate a rental property.
Texas law requires landlords and tenants to provide a certain amount of “notice” to each other, in order to stop a lease from automatically renewing or from continuing.