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The duration of an eviction process in Alabama can vary, but it may take anywhere from a few weeks to several months. Factors include court scheduling and any potential delays in proceedings. By understanding the timeline, you can prepare accordingly. US Legal Forms offers legal documents that may simplify the eviction process, ensuring you stay informed and prepared.
The process of evicting a tenant in Alabama can take about one month to several months depending on whether the eviction is for nonpayment of rent or another type of eviction, whether there's a continuance, and/or whether an appeal is filed (read more).
You may be able to kick someone out of your house in Alabama if there's no landlord/tenant relationship. If the person paid rent, or performed services in and around your home in exchange for living there, you may need to follow Alabama's eviction process to remove them.
Alabama landlords must give two days' notice and can enter only at reasonable times.
The notice must inform the tenant that rent must be paid or the tenant must move out within seven days, or the landlord will terminate the lease or rental agreement and file an eviction lawsuit against the tenant. If the tenant pays the rent, then the landlord must not proceed with the eviction.
In Alabama, landlords cannot evict a tenant or force them to vacate the property without probable cause. As long as the tenant does not violate any rules, they can stay until their rental period ends.
Eviction Process for No Lease / End of Lease In the state of Alabama, if tenants holdover, or stay in the rental unit after the rental term has expired, then the landlord must give tenants written notice before evicting them. The amount of time required in the notice depends on the type of tenancy.
Lease Expiration or Termination Under Alabama law, landlords can evict a tenant after the landlord has terminated the lease or if the lease has expired. In both cases, the landlord is claiming that the tenant no longer has the right to live in the property, regardless of the tenant's status on paying rent.
To terminate the lease, the landlord must first give the tenant notice. In Alabama, the landlord is required to give a seven-day notice in all of these situations.
Your landlord can end the let at any time by serving a written 'notice to quit'. The notice period will depend on the tenancy or agreement, but is often at least 4 weeks.