How to respond to an eviction notice
What an eviction notice means, the deadlines that usually apply, and the steps tenants commonly take to respond. Legal information, not legal advice.
What an eviction notice is — and isn't
An eviction notice is a written demand from a landlord. In most states it is the first step, not the eviction itself. A landlord generally cannot remove you, change the locks, or shut off utilities without first going to court and getting an order — doing those things directly is often called a 'self-help eviction' and is illegal in most places.
Notices come in a few common types: pay-or-quit (you owe rent), cure-or-quit (fix a lease violation), and unconditional quit (leave, no chance to fix). The type and the number of days you're given are set by your state and local law.
Find your deadline first
The single most important thing is the deadline on the notice. It is usually a specific number of days (for example 3, 5, 10, or 14) and it controls everything that follows. Missing it can let the case move forward without your side being heard.
The exact number of days, and how the days are counted (calendar vs. business days, whether weekends count), is jurisdiction-specific. Confirm it against your state or city's official tenant resources rather than assuming — Pike pulls the deadline from a verified source when you ask.
Steps tenants commonly take
Read the notice and write down the deadline and the reason given. Gather your lease, rent receipts, bank records, and any messages with your landlord. If the notice claims you owe rent, check the math against what you actually paid.
If a court case (often called an 'unlawful detainer' or 'summons and complaint') has already been filed, there is usually a separate, shorter deadline to file a written answer with the court. Many courts have fee waivers if you can't afford the filing fee.
Free help exists. Tenant unions, local legal aid, and the court's self-help center can explain your specific options. Pike can find legal aid near you and explain the steps — it does not represent you or appear in court for you.
Common questions
In most states, no — not without a court order carried out by a sheriff or marshal. Locking you out, removing your belongings, or cutting off utilities to force you out is generally illegal 'self-help' eviction. Check your state's tenant law for the specific rule.
The date is a deadline to act (pay, fix the problem, or respond), not always a date you must be gone. If you don't resolve it, the landlord's next step is usually to file in court — where you can still respond. Confirm your jurisdiction's process.
Most courts offer a fee waiver for people with low income. The court's self-help center or clerk can give you the form. Pike can help you prepare a fee-waiver request.
This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by state and change over time — confirm the specifics for your jurisdiction, and for advice about your situation talk to a licensed attorney or your local legal aid.
Pike can help you draft the documents for this — you sign and send them yourself.