Arizona Immediate Notice to Quit | Irreparable Breach

An Arizona immediate notice to quit is a document informing a tenant that they must move out of the rental property because they committed an illegal activity or other irreparable violation. A tenant receiving this notice must vacate the premises immediately, with no option to fix the issue, or the landlord can file an eviction lawsuit.

Arizona Immediate Notice to Quit | Irreparable Breach

An Arizona immediate notice to quit is a document informing a tenant that they must move out of the rental property because they committed an illegal activity or other irreparable violation. A tenant receiving this notice must vacate the premises immediately, with no option to fix the issue, or the landlord can file an eviction lawsuit.

Last updated August 28th, 2024

An Arizona immediate notice to quit is a document informing a tenant that they must move out of the rental property because they committed an illegal activity or other irreparable violation. A tenant receiving this notice must vacate the premises immediately, with no option to fix the issue, or the landlord can file an eviction lawsuit.

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Irreparable Violations:

A landlord may terminate tenancy immediately for certain violations, including, but not limited to[1]:

  • Illegal discharge of a weapon
  • Homicide
  • Prostitution
  • Criminal street gang activity
  • Participating in a criminal syndicate
  • Unlawful manufacturing, selling, transferring, possessing, using, or storing of a controlled substance
  • Threatening or intimidating
  • Assault
  • Acts constituting a nuisance
  • A breach of the rental agreement that jeopardizes health, safety, and welfare or involves imminent or actual serious property damage.

Immediate Notice to Quit (Preview)

Sources

  1. § 33-1368(A)