10 State Jurisdictions Monitored

Statute Archive

Last database sync: May 19, 2026

NoticeGen is powered by a proprietary rules engine programmatically mapped to specific state statutes. Below are the primary legal codes we support, validate against, and monitor monthly for updates.

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California Landlord Guide

Read our comprehensive, statute-mapped guide to drafting and serving notices in California.

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Late Rent Notice
Statutory Code

CCP § 1161(2) & § 1162

Notice Period3 Business Days

Governs requirements for nonpayment of rent. By law, weekends and court holidays are strictly excluded. The exact expiration date must be printed verbatim on the notice, and late fees must be omitted to prevent invalidating the eviction action.

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Lease Violation
Statutory Code

CCP § 1161(3); Civil Code § 1946.2(c)

Notice Period3 Business Days

Applies to curable breaches of lease covenants. Landlord must give the tenant a clear, written 3-day notice to cure the violation or quit. Properties subject to AB 1482 must follow a strict two-step process before a final unconditional notice can be served.

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Notice to Enter
Statutory Code

Civil Code § 1954

Notice Period24 Hours Notice

Prescribes when a landlord may enter an occupied unit (repairs, inspections, showing the property). Entry is strictly limited to normal business hours, and notice must be personally delivered or posted 24 hours prior. Mailing requires 6 days' notice.

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Unconditional Quit
Statutory Code

CCP § 1161(4); Civil Code § 1946.2(c)

Notice Period3 Business Days

Restricted to severe, non-curable breaches such as committing waste, causing a severe nuisance, or using the premises for an illegal purpose. Eviction suit can be filed immediately upon the expiration of the 3 business days without giving a right to cure.

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Rent Increase
Statutory Code

Civil Code § 827 & § 1947.12

Notice Period30 to 90 Days

Increases up to 10% require 30 days' notice. Increases over 10% require a 90-day period. AB 1482 places a strict statutory cap of 5% + local CPI (maximum 10%) on covered properties and requires specific disclaimer text.

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Lease Non-Renewal
Statutory Code

Civil Code § 1946.1 & § 1946.2

Notice Period30 to 60 Days

Requires 30 days' notice for tenancies under one year, and 60 days' notice for tenancies exceeding one year. Covered properties under state just cause laws require a statutory no-fault reason and a mandatory payment of 1 month's rent for relocation assistance.

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Notice of Statutory Accuracy

While we actively monitor these statutes monthly for legislative modifications (including the recent Texas Senate Bill 38 and Colorado HB 24-1098 updates), local ordinances, state-level amendments, and active court rulings can affect notice parameters in real-time. NoticeGen is a document preparation software tool and does not provide legal advice or direct legal representation. Landlords should always consult certified local counsel before pursuing eviction actions.