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Vermont Counties

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Texas State Law

Below is a copy of the landlord tenant code for TX. This is the ultimate source of truth for landlord tenant issues in the great state of Texas. This is a large file but every other one we found online was jumbled up into numerous pages and hard to decipher. This should be easier to read and extract.

Vermont Landlord-Tenant Law

Complete verbatim statute text · 28 sections

📑 Table of Contents
General
§ 4451 Definitions § 4452 Exclusions § 4453 Obligations Implied § 4454 Attempt to Circumvent § 4455 Tenant Obligations — Payment of Rent § 4456 Tenant Obligations — Use and Maintenance of Dwelling Unit § 4456a Residential Rental Application — No Fees; ID Alternatives § 4456b Subleases — Landlord and Tenant Rights and Obligations § 4457 Landlord Obligations — Implied Warranty of Habitability § 4458 Habitability — Tenant Remedies § 4459 Minor Defects — Repair and Deduct § 4460 Access § 4461 Security Deposits § 4462 Abandonment — Unclaimed Property § 4463 Illegal Evictions Prohibited § 4464 Remedies for Illegal Evictions § 4465 Retaliatory Conduct Prohibited § 4466 Required Disclosure — Special Flood Hazard Area § 4467(a) Termination of Tenancy — Nonpayment of Rent § 4467(b) Termination of Tenancy — Breach of Rental Agreement § 4467(c) Termination of Tenancy — No Cause (No Written Lease) § 4467(d)–(e) Termination of Tenancy — Property Sale and Written Lease No-Cause § 4467(f)–(k) Termination of Tenancy — Shared Occupancy, Multiple Notices, Post-Termination Rent, and Filing Deadline § 4468 Termination of Tenancy — Action for Possession (Holdover) § 4468a Age-Restricted Housing — Rent Increase Notice Requirements § 4469a Termination of Occupancy of Farm Employee Housing §§ 4471–4472 Protected Tenants — Definitions and Right to Terminate §§ 4473–4475 Protected Tenants — Lock Changes, Confidentiality, and Landlord Immunity
§ 4451

Definitions

As used in this chapter: (1) 'Actual notice' means receipt of written notice hand-delivered or mailed to the last known address. A rebuttable presumption that the notice was received three days after mailing is created if the sending party proves that the notice was sent by first-class or certified U.S. mail. (2) 'Building, housing, and health regulations' means any law, ordinance, or governmental regulation concerning health, safety, sanitation, or fitness for habitation or concerning the construction, maintenance, operation, occupancy, use, or appearance of any premises or dwelling unit. (3) 'Dwelling unit' means a building or the part of a building that is used as a home, residence, or sleeping place by one or more persons who maintain a household. (4) 'Landlord' means the owner, lessor, or where applicable, the sublessor of a residential dwelling unit or the building of which it is a part. (5) 'Normal wear and tear' means the deterioration that occurs, based upon the reasonable use for which the rental unit is intended, without negligence, carelessness, accident, or abuse of the premises or equipment or chattels by the tenant or members of his or her household or their invitees or guests. (6) 'Premises' means a dwelling unit, its appurtenances and the building, and the grounds, areas, and facilities held out for the use of tenants generally or whose use is promised to the tenant. (7) 'Rent' means all consideration to be made to or for the benefit of the landlord under the rental agreement, not including security deposits. (8) 'Rental agreement' means all agreements, written or oral, embodying terms and conditions concerning the use and occupancy of a dwelling unit and premises. (9) 'Sublease' means a rental agreement, written or oral, embodying terms and conditions concerning the use and occupancy of a dwelling unit and premises between two tenants, a sublessor, and a sublessee. (10) 'Tenant' means a person entitled under a rental agreement to occupy a residential dwelling unit to the exclusion of others.
💡 General Comment
Core definitions governing all of Chapter 137. 'Actual notice' carries a rebuttable presumption of receipt three days after first-class or certified mailing. 'Normal wear and tear' is expressly defined and limits permissible security deposit deductions. Security deposits are explicitly excluded from the definition of 'rent.'
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4452

Exclusions

(a) Unless created to avoid the application of this chapter, this chapter does not apply to: (1) occupancy at a public or private institution operated for the purpose of providing medical, geriatric, educational, counseling, religious, or similar service; (2) occupancy under a contract of sale of a dwelling unit if the occupant is the purchaser or successor; (3) occupancy by a member of a fraternal, social, or religious organization in the portion of a building operated for the benefit of the organization; (4) transient occupancy in a hotel, motel, or lodgings subject to 32 V.S.A. chapter 225 tax; (5) occupancy by a condominium unit owner or cooperative proprietary lease holder; (6) rental of a mobile home lot governed by 10 V.S.A. chapter 153; (7) transient residence in a campground for seasonal or short-term vacation or recreational purposes; (8) transient hotel/motel occupancy by a General Assistance or Emergency Assistance recipient, or certain federally funded Emergency Rental Assistance placements; (9) occupancy without right or permission by a non-tenant; (10) transient occupancy paid for by a licensed hospital or designated agency for health care treatment or recovery. (b) A certified recovery residence may immediately exit or transfer a resident without the standard eviction process when specific conditions are met, including an approved residential agreement, resident consent reaffirmed after seven days, violation of the substance use policy or acts of violence, and arrangement of alternative housing. This subsection is repealed effective July 1, 2026.
💡 General Comment
Chapter 137 does not apply to institutional, transient, condominium, mobile home lot, or campground occupancies. The recovery residence exception allowing immediate exit/transfer without standard eviction notice expires July 1, 2026. Occupancy arrangements created specifically to avoid the chapter's protections remain covered.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4453

Obligations Implied

Obligations imposed on landlords and tenants under this chapter shall be implied in all rental agreements.
💡 General Comment
All Chapter 137 landlord and tenant obligations are automatically implied in every rental agreement — written or oral — whether or not they are expressly stated. Parties cannot contract around them.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4454

Attempt to Circumvent

No rental agreement shall contain any provision that attempts to circumvent or circumvents obligations and remedies established by this chapter and any such provision shall be unenforceable and void.
💡 General Comment
Any lease clause that attempts to waive, limit, or work around a landlord's or tenant's Chapter 137 rights is void and unenforceable as a matter of law. This provides a strong floor of tenant protections that cannot be contracted away.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4455

Tenant Obligations — Payment of Rent

(a) Rent is payable without demand or notice at the time and place agreed upon by the parties. (b) An increase in rent shall take effect on the first day of the rental period following no less than 60 days' actual notice to the tenant.
💡 General Comment
Rent is due without the landlord needing to request it — failure to pay on the agreed date is immediately actionable. Rent increases require at least 60 days' actual written notice before taking effect at the start of a new rental period.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4456

Tenant Obligations — Use and Maintenance of Dwelling Unit

(a) The tenant shall not create or contribute to the noncompliance of the dwelling unit with applicable provisions of building, housing, and health regulations. (b) The tenant shall conduct himself or herself and require other persons on the premises with the tenant's consent to conduct themselves in a manner that will not disturb other tenants' peaceful enjoyment of the premises. (c) The tenant shall not deliberately or negligently destroy, deface, damage, or remove any part of the premises or its fixtures, mechanical systems, or furnishings or deliberately or negligently permit any person to do so. (d) Unless inconsistent with a written rental agreement or otherwise provided by law, a tenant may terminate a tenancy by actual notice given to the landlord at least one rental payment period prior to the termination date specified in the notice. (e) If a tenant acts in violation of this section, the landlord is entitled to recover damages, costs, and reasonable attorney's fees, and the violation shall be grounds for termination under subsection 4467(b).
💡 General Comment
Tenants must maintain code compliance, respect neighbors' quiet enjoyment, and avoid damage to the unit. Guests and invitees are the tenant's responsibility. Lease violations under this section trigger landlord's right to recover damages plus attorney's fees and serve as grounds for a 30-day termination notice under § 4467(b).
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4456a

Residential Rental Application — No Fees; ID Alternatives

(a) A landlord or a landlord's agent shall not charge an application fee to any individual in order to apply to enter into a rental agreement for a residential dwelling unit. This subsection shall not be construed to prohibit a person from charging a fee to a person in order to apply to rent commercial or nonresidential property. (b)(1) In order to conduct a background or credit check, a landlord shall accept any of the following: (A) an original or a copy of any unexpired form of government-issued identification; (B) an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number; or (C) a Social Security number. (2) A landlord or a landlord's agent shall not require a Social Security number for the completion of a residential rental application or refuse to accept an application due to the lack of a Social Security number.
💡 General Comment
Vermont prohibits residential rental application fees entirely. Landlords must accept a government-issued ID or ITIN as an alternative to a Social Security number and may not reject an application solely because the applicant lacks an SSN. Amended 2025, No. 69, eff. July 1, 2025.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: July 1, 2025 (as amended by 2025, No. 69)
§ 4456b

Subleases — Landlord and Tenant Rights and Obligations

(a)(1) A landlord may condition or prohibit subleasing a dwelling unit under the terms of a written rental agreement and may require a tenant to provide written notice of the name and contact information of any sublessee occupying the dwelling unit. (2) If the terms of a written rental agreement prohibit subleasing the dwelling unit, the landlord or tenant may bring an action for ejectment pursuant to 12 V.S.A. §§ 4761 and 4853b against a person occupying the dwelling unit without right or permission. (b) In the absence of a written rental agreement, a tenant shall provide the landlord with written notice of the name and contact information of any sublessee occupying the dwelling unit.
💡 General Comment
Subleasing may be restricted or prohibited only through a written rental agreement. Without a written lease, subleasing is permitted but the tenant must notify the landlord in writing of the sublessee's name and contact information. Unauthorized sublessee occupancy under a prohibiting lease is grounds for ejectment.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4457

Landlord Obligations — Implied Warranty of Habitability

(a) Warranty of habitability. In any residential rental agreement, the landlord shall be deemed to covenant and warrant to deliver over and maintain, throughout the period of the tenancy, premises that are safe, clean, and fit for human habitation and that comply with the requirements of applicable building, housing, and health regulations. (b) Waiver. No rental agreement shall contain any provision by which the tenant waives the protections of the implied warranty of habitability. Any such waiver shall be deemed contrary to public policy and shall be unenforceable and void. (c) Heat and water. As part of the implied warranty of habitability, the landlord shall ensure that the dwelling unit has heating facilities that are capable of safely providing a reasonable amount of heat. Every landlord who provides heat as part of the rental agreement shall at all times supply a reasonable amount of heat to the dwelling unit. The landlord shall provide an adequate amount of water to each dwelling unit properly connected with hot and cold water lines. The hot water lines shall be connected with supplied water-heating facilities capable of heating sufficient water to permit an adequate amount to be drawn. This subsection shall not apply to a dwelling unit intended and rented for summer occupancy or as a hunting camp.
💡 General Comment
Vermont's implied warranty of habitability is non-waivable and persists throughout the entire tenancy — not just at move-in. The landlord must maintain safe, clean, habitable premises at all times. Heat and hot/cold water are expressly required as part of the warranty. Any lease clause purporting to waive these protections is void as against public policy.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4458

Habitability — Tenant Remedies

(a) If the landlord fails to comply with the landlord's obligations for habitability and, after receiving actual notice of the noncompliance from the tenant, a governmental entity or a qualified independent inspector, the landlord fails to make repairs within a reasonable time and the noncompliance materially affects health and safety, the tenant may: (1) withhold the payment of rent for the period of the noncompliance; (2) obtain injunctive relief; (3) recover damages, costs, and reasonable attorney's fees; and (4) terminate the rental agreement on reasonable notice. (b) Tenant remedies under this section are not available if the noncompliance was caused by the negligent or deliberate act or omission of the tenant or a person on the premises with the tenant's consent.
💡 General Comment
Habitability remedies are triggered when: (1) the landlord receives actual notice of noncompliance, (2) fails to repair within a reasonable time, and (3) the defect materially affects health and safety. Tenant may then withhold rent, seek injunctive relief, recover damages with attorney's fees, or terminate the lease. Remedies are not available when the tenant caused the problem.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4459

Minor Defects — Repair and Deduct

(a) If within 30 days of notice, the landlord fails to repair a minor defect in order to comply with this chapter or a material provision of the rental agreement, the tenant may repair the defect and deduct from the rent the actual and reasonable cost of the work, not to exceed one-half of one month's rent. The tenant shall provide the landlord with actual notice of the cost of the repair when the cost is deducted from the rent. (b) The tenant remedies under this section are not available if the noncompliance was caused by the negligent or deliberate act or omission of the tenant or a person on the premises with the tenant's consent.
💡 General Comment
Repair-and-deduct is available for minor defects (not the full habitability threshold) if the landlord fails to act within 30 days of notice. The deduction cap is one-half of one month's rent. The tenant must notify the landlord of the cost at the time of the deduction. Not available when the defect was tenant-caused.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4460

Access

(a) A landlord may enter the dwelling unit with the tenant's consent, which shall not be unreasonably withheld. (b) A landlord may also enter the dwelling unit for the following purposes between the hours of 9:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M. on no less than 48 hours' notice: (1) when necessary to inspect the premises; (2) to make necessary or agreed repairs, alterations, or improvements; (3) to supply agreed services; or (4) to exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants, workers, or contractors. (c) A landlord may only enter the dwelling unit without consent or notice when the landlord has a reasonable belief that there is imminent danger to any person or to property.
💡 General Comment
Landlord entry requires 48 hours' advance notice and must occur between 9 AM and 9 PM. Entry without notice is permitted only when the landlord reasonably believes imminent danger exists. Tenant consent may not be unreasonably withheld. Unauthorized entry may give rise to a claim under § 4464.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4461

Security Deposits

(a) A security deposit is any advance, deposit, or prepaid rent, however named, which is refundable to the tenant at the termination or expiration of the tenancy. The function of a security deposit is to secure the performance of a tenant's obligations to pay rent and to maintain a dwelling unit. (b) The landlord may retain all or a portion of the security deposit for: (1) nonpayment of rent; (2) damage to property of the landlord, unless the damage is the result of normal wear and tear or the result of actions or events beyond the control of the tenant; (3) nonpayment of utility or other charges that the tenant was required to pay directly to the landlord or to a utility; and (4) expenses required to remove from the rental unit articles abandoned by the tenant. (c) A landlord shall return the security deposit along with a written statement itemizing any deductions to a tenant within 14 days from the date on which the landlord discovers that the tenant vacated or abandoned the dwelling unit or the date the tenant vacated the dwelling unit, provided the landlord received notice from the tenant of that date. In the case of the seasonal occupancy and rental of a dwelling unit not intended as a primary residence, the security deposit and written statement shall be returned within 60 days. (d) The landlord shall comply with this section by hand-delivering or mailing the statement and any payment required to the last known address of the tenant. (e) If a landlord fails to return the security deposit with a statement within 14 days, the landlord forfeits the right to withhold any portion of the security deposit. If the failure is willful, the landlord shall be liable for double the amount wrongfully withheld, plus reasonable attorney's fees and costs. (f) Upon termination of the landlord's interest in the dwelling unit, the security deposit shall be transferred to the new landlord. The new landlord shall give the tenant actual notice of the new landlord's name and address with a statement that the security deposit has been transferred. (g) A town or municipality may adopt an ordinance governing security deposits on dwellings supplemental to and not inconsistent with the minimum protections of this section.
💡 General Comment
Security deposit must be returned with an itemized written statement within 14 days of the landlord learning of vacancy (60 days for seasonal units). Permissible deductions: unpaid rent, damage beyond normal wear and tear, unpaid utility charges owed to landlord, and abandoned article removal. Late return forfeits all deduction rights. Willful failure doubles the withheld amount plus attorney's fees. Deposit transfers automatically on property sale. Municipalities may supplement but not reduce these protections.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4462

Abandonment — Unclaimed Property

(a) A tenant has abandoned a dwelling unit if: (1) there are circumstances that would lead a reasonable person to believe that the dwelling unit is no longer occupied as a full-time residence; (2) rent is not current; and (3) the landlord has made reasonable efforts to ascertain the tenant's intentions. (b) If the tenant abandons the dwelling unit, the tenant shall remain liable for rent until the expiration of the rental agreement. However, if the landlord rents the dwelling unit before the expiration of the rental agreement, the agreement terminates on the date of the new tenancy. (c)(1) If any property, except trash, is unclaimed by a tenant who has abandoned a dwelling unit, the landlord shall give written notice mailed to the tenant's last known address that the landlord intends to dispose of the property after 60 days if the tenant has not claimed the property and paid reasonable storage fees. The landlord shall place the property in a safe, dry, secured location. The tenant may claim the property within 60 days by providing a written description and paying storage costs. (2) If the tenant does not claim the property within 60 days, the property becomes the landlord's. (d) Any personal property remaining after the tenant vacates may be disposed of without notice or liability if the tenant provided actual notice of vacating or vacated at the end of the rental agreement.
💡 General Comment
Abandonment requires all three elements: apparent non-occupancy, delinquent rent, and landlord inquiry attempts. Abandoned tenants remain rent-liable through the lease term unless the unit is re-rented. Unclaimed non-trash property requires a 60-day written notice before disposal. Property left after a voluntary vacate (with notice or at lease end) may be disposed of immediately without liability.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4463

Illegal Evictions Prohibited

(a) No landlord may willfully cause, directly or indirectly, the interruption or termination of any utility service being supplied to the tenant, except for temporary interruptions for emergency repairs. (b) No landlord may directly or indirectly deny a tenant access to and possession of the tenant's rented or leased premises, except through proper judicial process. (c) No landlord may directly or indirectly deny a tenant access to and possession of the tenant's property, except through proper judicial process.
💡 General Comment
Vermont prohibits all forms of self-help eviction. Utility shutoffs (other than for emergency repairs), lockouts, and denial of access to a tenant's personal property are all illegal outside of judicial process. Violations entitle the tenant to seek remedies under § 4464 including injunctive relief, damages, and attorney's fees.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4464

Remedies for Illegal Evictions

(a) Any tenant who sustains damage or injury as a result of an illegal eviction may bring an action for injunctive relief, damages, costs, and reasonable attorney's fees. (b) A court may award reasonable attorney's fees to the landlord if, upon motion and hearing, it is determined that the action was not brought in good faith and was frivolous or intended for harassment only.
💡 General Comment
Tenants victimized by self-help evictions (utility shutoffs, lockouts, property denial) may seek injunctive relief, actual damages, costs, and attorney's fees. Courts have discretion to award attorney's fees to a landlord if the tenant's illegal eviction claim was frivolous or brought solely for harassment purposes.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4465

Retaliatory Conduct Prohibited

(a) A landlord of a residential dwelling unit may not retaliate by establishing or changing terms of a rental agreement or by bringing or threatening to bring an action against a tenant who: (1) has complained to a governmental agency charged with responsibility for enforcement of a building, housing, or health regulation of a violation applicable to the premises materially affecting health and safety; (2) has complained to the landlord of a violation of this chapter; or (3) has organized or become a member of a tenant's union or similar organization. (b) If the landlord acts in violation of this section, the tenant is entitled to recover damages and reasonable attorney's fees and has a defense in any retaliatory action for possession. (c) If a landlord serves notice of termination of tenancy on any grounds other than for nonpayment of rent within 90 days after notice by any municipal or State governmental entity that the premises are not in compliance with applicable health or safety regulations, there is a rebuttable presumption that any termination by the landlord is in retaliation for the tenant having reported the noncompliance.
💡 General Comment
Landlords may not retaliate against tenants for reporting code violations, complaining about Chapter 137 violations, or organizing. A non-payment termination notice served within 90 days of a government health/safety notice creates a rebuttable presumption of retaliation — shifting the burden to the landlord to prove a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason. Remedies include damages, attorney's fees, and a defense to eviction.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4466

Required Disclosure — Special Flood Hazard Area

(a) A landlord shall disclose in advance of entering a rental agreement with a tenant whether any portion of the premises offered for rent is located in a Federal Emergency Management Agency mapped special flood hazard area. This notice shall be provided to the tenant at or before execution of the lease in a separate written document substantially in the form prescribed by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to subsection (b) of this section. (b) The Department of Housing and Community Development shall develop a model form for the notice provided under this section.
💡 General Comment
Landlords must disclose FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area status before any lease is signed, using the model form developed by the Department of Housing and Community Development. Disclosure must be a separate written document — it cannot be buried in the lease itself. Added by 2023 Act No. 181, eff. June 17, 2024.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: June 17, 2024 (added by 2023, No. 181)
§ 4467(a)

Termination of Tenancy — Nonpayment of Rent

(a) Termination for nonpayment of rent. The landlord may terminate a tenancy for nonpayment of rent by providing actual notice to the tenant of the date on which the tenancy will terminate, which shall be at least 14 days after the date of the actual notice. The rental agreement shall not terminate if the tenant pays or tenders rent due through the end of the rental period in which payment is made or tendered. Acceptance of partial payment of rent shall not constitute a waiver of the landlord's remedies for nonpayment of rent or an accord and satisfaction for nonpayment of rent.
💡 General Comment
Nonpayment termination requires at least 14 days' actual notice stating the specific termination date. The tenancy is saved if the tenant tenders all rent due through the end of the rental period before the termination date. Accepting partial payment does not waive the landlord's right to proceed with eviction for the remaining unpaid rent.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4467(b)

Termination of Tenancy — Breach of Rental Agreement

(b) Termination for breach of rental agreement. (1) The landlord may terminate a tenancy for failure of the tenant to comply with a material term of the rental agreement or with obligations imposed under this chapter by actual notice given to the tenant at least 30 days prior to the termination date specified in the notice. (2) When termination is based on criminal activity, illegal drug activity, or acts of violence, any of which threaten the health or safety of other residents, the landlord may terminate the tenancy by providing actual notice to the tenant of the date on which the tenancy will terminate, which shall be at least 14 days from the date of the actual notice.
💡 General Comment
General lease breach requires 30 days' actual notice. Criminal activity, illegal drug activity, or acts of violence threatening other residents' health or safety accelerates the notice requirement to 14 days. In both cases, the termination date must be specifically stated in the notice.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4467(c)

Termination of Tenancy — No Cause (No Written Lease)

(c) Termination for no cause. In the absence of a written rental agreement, the landlord may terminate a tenancy for no cause as follows: (1) If rent is payable on a monthly basis, by providing actual notice to the tenant of the date on which the tenancy will terminate, which shall be: (A) for tenants who have resided continuously in the same premises for two years or less, at least 60 days after the date of the actual notice; (B) for tenants who have resided continuously in the same premises for more than two years, at least 90 days after the date of the actual notice. (2) If rent is payable on a weekly basis, by providing actual notice to the tenant of the date on which the tenancy will terminate, which shall be at least 21 days after the date of the actual notice.
💡 General Comment
No-cause termination without a written lease: monthly tenants of 2 years or less require 60 days' notice; monthly tenants over 2 years require 90 days' notice. Weekly tenants require 21 days' notice. Vermont's tenure-based escalating notice requirement provides stronger protection for long-term tenants than many other states.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4467(d)–(e)

Termination of Tenancy — Property Sale and Written Lease No-Cause

(d) Termination of rental agreement when property is sold. In the absence of a written rental agreement a landlord who has contracted to sell the building may terminate a tenancy by providing actual notice to the tenant of the date on which the tenancy will terminate, which shall be at least 30 days after the date of the actual notice. (e) Termination for no cause under terms of written rental agreement. If there is a written rental agreement, the notice to terminate for no cause shall be at least 30 days before the end or expiration of the stated term of the rental agreement if the tenancy has continued for two years or less. The notice to terminate for no cause shall be at least 60 days before the end or expiration of the term if the tenancy has continued for more than two years. If there is a written week-to-week rental agreement, the notice to terminate for no cause shall be at least seven days; however, a notice to terminate for nonpayment of rent shall be as provided in subsection (a).
💡 General Comment
Property sale (no written lease): 30 days' notice. Written lease no-cause termination: 30 days before lease end for tenancies of 2 years or less; 60 days before lease end for tenancies over 2 years. Written week-to-week lease: 7 days. These notice periods run from the date of notice to the lease expiration date, not to an independent termination date.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4467(f)–(k)

Termination of Tenancy — Shared Occupancy, Multiple Notices, Post-Termination Rent, and Filing Deadline

(f) Termination date. In all cases, the termination date shall be specifically stated in the notice. (g) Conversion to condominium. Notice shall be given in accordance with 27 V.S.A. chapter 15, subchapter 2. (h) Termination of shared occupancy. A rental arrangement whereby a person rents to another individual one or more rooms in his or her personal residence that includes the shared use of any of the common living spaces may be terminated by either party by providing actual notice, which shall be at least 15 days after the date of actual notice if rent is payable monthly and at least seven days if rent is payable weekly. (i) Multiple notices. All actual notices in compliance with this section shall not invalidate any other actual notice and shall each be a valid basis for commencing and maintaining an action for possession. A landlord may maintain an ejectment action and rely on as many grounds for ejectment as are allowed by law. (j) Payment after termination; effect. (1) A landlord's acceptance of full or partial rent payment after termination of the tenancy for reasons other than nonpayment, or at any time during the ejectment action, shall not result in dismissal of the ejectment action or constitute a waiver of the landlord's remedies for lease breach, tenant obligation violations, or no-cause terminations. (k) Commencement of ejectment action. A notice to terminate a tenancy shall be insufficient to support a judgment of eviction unless the proceeding is commenced not later than 60 days from the termination date set forth in the notice.
💡 General Comment
Critical procedural rules: (1) every notice must state a specific termination date; (2) shared-occupancy rooms terminate on 15 days (monthly) or 7 days (weekly); (3) multiple simultaneous notices are each independently valid; (4) accepting rent during a non-payment eviction action does not waive the landlord's right to proceed; (5) the landlord must file the ejectment action within 60 days of the stated termination date or the notice expires.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4468

Termination of Tenancy — Action for Possession (Holdover)

If the tenant remains in possession after termination of the rental agreement without the express consent of the landlord, the landlord may bring an action for possession, damages, and costs under 12 V.S.A. chapter 169, subchapter 3.
💡 General Comment
A holdover tenant who remains after the termination date without the landlord's consent may be removed via the ejectment procedure under 12 V.S.A. ch. 169, subchapter 3. The landlord may also seek damages and costs for the holdover period.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§ 4468a

Age-Restricted Housing — Rent Increase Notice Requirements

(a) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section, an owner of privately owned age-restricted residential property within the State that is not licensed pursuant to 33 V.S.A. chapter 71 or 8 V.S.A. chapter 151 shall provide written notification on a form provided by the Department of Housing and Community Development to the Department and all the affected residents of any rent increase at the property not later than 60 days before the effective date of the proposed increase. The notice shall include: (1) the amount of the proposed rent increase; (2) the effective date of the increase; (3) a copy of the resident's rights pursuant to this section; and (4) the percentage of increase from the current base rent. (b) If the owner fails to notify either the residents or the Department of a rent increase as required by subsection (a), the proposed rent increase shall be ineffective and unenforceable. (c) This section shall not apply to any rent increase at any publicly subsidized affordable housing that is monitored by a State or federal agency for rent limitations.
💡 General Comment
Privately owned age-restricted residential communities must notify both DHCD and all residents at least 60 days before any rent increase using the DHCD form, which must include the increase amount, effective date, percentage change, and resident rights. Failure to notify either party makes the increase void. Publicly subsidized affordable housing monitored for rent limits is exempt. Added by 2023, No. 181, eff. June 17, 2024.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: June 17, 2024 (added by 2023, No. 181)
§ 4469a

Termination of Occupancy of Farm Employee Housing

(a) As used in this section: (1) 'Farm employee' means an individual employed by a farm employer for farming operations. (2) 'Farm employer' means a person earning at least one-half of his or her annual gross income from farming. (3) 'Housing provided as a benefit of farm employment' means housing owned or controlled by the farm employer, provided for the occupancy of the farm employee and family or household members for no payment other than the farm employee's labor. (b) Unless otherwise provided in a written employment contract, a farm employer who provides housing to a farm employee as a benefit of the employment may terminate that benefit and all rights to occupy the housing when the employee's employment is terminated. (c) Termination shall be by written notice served upon the former farm employee by a law enforcement officer in accordance with Rule 4 of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure, together with a summons and complaint seeking a writ of possession. The notice shall include required boldface statements advising the former employee of the legal proceeding, the right to a hearing at least 10 days after service, the right to appear, and the availability of legal assistance. (d)–(e) The farm employer is entitled to an expedited show-cause hearing; if the court finds actual hardship due to unavailability of housing for a replacement employee, the court shall enter a writ of possession executable not earlier than 5 business days and not later than 30 days after service. (f) If actual hardship is not found, the farm employer must proceed under §§ 4467 and 4468 and 12 V.S.A. ch. 169. (g) Former employee counterclaims are preserved but do not delay removal or entitle the employee to injunctive relief for repossession. (h) Sections 4455, 4461, and 4467 of this chapter shall not apply to housing provided to a farm employee as a benefit of the employment.
💡 General Comment
Farm employee housing provided as a no-cost employment benefit operates under a separate expedited legal framework. Standard rent payment, security deposit, and termination notice provisions (§§ 4455, 4461, 4467) do not apply. Termination requires law-enforcement service of notice plus summons and complaint. The employer must prove actual hardship at an expedited hearing held at least 10 days after service. Former employee counterclaims survive but cannot block or delay removal.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: 2025 Session (as amended)
§§ 4471–4472

Protected Tenants — Definitions and Right to Terminate

§ 4471 Definitions: (1) 'Abuse' has the same meaning as in 15 V.S.A. § 1101. (2) 'Protected tenant' means a tenant who is: (A) a victim of abuse, sexual assault, or stalking; or (B) a parent, foster parent, legal guardian, or caretaker with at least partial physical custody of a victim of abuse, sexual assault, or stalking. (3) 'Sexual assault' and 'stalking' have the same meaning as in 12 V.S.A. § 5131. § 4472: (a) Notwithstanding a contrary provision of a rental agreement or of subchapter 2, a protected tenant may terminate a rental agreement without penalty or liability if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to vacate: (1) based on a fear of imminent harm due to abuse, sexual assault, or stalking; or (2) if any protected tenant was a victim of sexual assault on the premises within the six months preceding the date of notice. (b) Not less than 30 days before the date of termination, the protected tenant shall provide to the landlord: (1) written notice of termination; and (2) documentation from a court, law enforcement, government agency, assistance program, or professional, or a self-certification signed under penalty of perjury on a standard form. (c) The notice of termination may be revoked if the protected tenant notifies the landlord in writing before a new rental agreement is executed with another tenant, or if the tenant has not yet vacated and no new tenancy has begun.
💡 General Comment
Protected tenants — victims of abuse, sexual assault, or stalking (and their custodial caretakers) — may terminate any lease without penalty on 30 days' written notice with supporting documentation. Documentation may include a self-certification signed under penalty of perjury. The early termination right overrides any conflicting lease provision. The notice may be revoked before a new tenant is placed or before the original tenant vacates.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Effective October 12, 2020 (added by 2019, No. 48)
§§ 4473–4475

Protected Tenants — Lock Changes, Confidentiality, and Landlord Immunity

§ 4473: (1) A protected tenant may request that a landlord change the locks of a dwelling unit within 48 hours following the request based on fear of imminent harm or sexual assault on the premises within the preceding six months. (2) If the perpetrator is also a co-tenant, the protected tenant must include a copy of a court order requiring the perpetrator to leave. (3) If the landlord changes the locks, the landlord shall provide a key to each remaining tenant (excluding the perpetrator subject to a court order). (4) If the landlord does not change the locks, the protected tenant may change them without prior permission, provided the tenant ensures equal or better quality, notifies the landlord within 24 hours, and provides the landlord a key. (5) The protected tenant bears the cost of new locks. (6) A protected tenant may request permission to install additional security measures (security system, camera); the landlord may not unreasonably refuse; tenant bears cost and liability for installation. § 4474: Landlords, owners, and housing subsidy providers who possess protected-tenant victim documentation must keep it confidential and may not disclose it except when authorized by the tenant, required by court order/regulation/audit, or needed as sealed evidence in a § 4472–4473 proceeding. § 4475: Except for gross negligence or willful misconduct, a landlord is immune from liability for damages to a protected tenant when acting in good faith reliance on this subchapter or on information provided by the protected tenant.
💡 General Comment
Lock change rights: landlord must act within 48 hours; if landlord refuses, protected tenant may self-help change locks but must notify landlord within 24 hours and provide a key. Court order required to exclude a co-tenant perpetrator. Additional security measures (systems/cameras) may not be unreasonably denied. All victim documentation is strictly confidential. Landlords acting in good faith under this subchapter have immunity except for gross negligence or willful misconduct.
📄 View Official Source ↗ Effective: Effective October 12, 2020 (added by 2019, No. 48)

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