For landlords who read the fine print

State-compliant landlord notices in 2 minutes. $12. No subscription. Ever.

Rent increases, non-renewals, pay-or-quit, cure-or-quit — with your state’s minimum notice period checked and the statute cited on the document. Pay once, print, serve.

Why we exist: the subscription trap.

Other form sites convert one-time purchases into auto-renewing subscriptions — the “$79 form” that quietly becomes $144+ a year, documented across BBB and Trustpilot complaints. We don’t do subscriptions. You pay for a document, you get a document, and we never see your card again.

How it works

1

Pick your state

All 50 states + DC. The rules — minimum days and statute — load automatically.

2

Pick the notice

Rent increase, non-renewal, lease violation (cure or quit), or nonpayment (pay or quit).

3

Fill in the details

We compute your notice period and warn you — with the statute — if it's below your state's minimum.

4

Pay $12, print, serve

A formal, single-page notice with a certificate of service. Print or save as PDF. Done — no account, no renewal.

Every notice includes

State minimum-notice check

Days between service and effective date, compared against your state's statutory minimum — with a prominent warning if you're short.

The statute, on the document

Each notice cites its governing statute (e.g., Cal. Civ. Code § 827(b)) so a court, tenant, or attorney can verify it.

Certificate of service

Delivery method, date, and signature block — the part free templates forget and courts ask about.

Formal legal-notice layout

Serif, letter-format, print-perfect single page. Looks like it came from a law office, not a word processor.

Tiered-rule handling

California's 30/90-day rent-increase rule, New York's 30/60/90-day occupancy tiers, Oregon's 90-day rule — encoded, not footnoted.

Honest pricing

$12 one-time. $39 for a landlord 5-pack. No account required, no auto-renewal, no card on file.

Pricing that respects you

One notice is $12. A landlord pack of five is $39. That’s the whole pricing page. No “free trial” that needs a card, no premium tier, no membership that renews while you sleep.

See pricing

$12 / notice, once

  • ✓ Any state, any of the four notice types
  • ✓ Statute citation + compliance check
  • ✓ Certificate of service included
  • ✓ Print / save as PDF instantly
  • ✓ No subscription. Ever.

Frequently asked questions

+Is this legal advice?

No. NoticeKit is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. We generate self-help forms based on state notice-period rules compiled from public statutes. Every notice cites the governing statute so you (or your attorney) can verify it. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.

+Is it really one-time? No subscription?

Really. You pay $12 for a notice (or $39 for a 5-pack) and that's it. No trial that converts, no auto-renewal, no card kept on file for a 'membership'. Other form sites convert one-time purchases into auto-renewing subscriptions. We don't do subscriptions.

+Which states are covered?

All 50 states plus the District of Columbia, for four notice types: rent increase, lease non-renewal / month-to-month termination, lease violation (cure or quit), and nonpayment of rent (pay or quit). Each notice shows the state minimum notice period and the statute it comes from.

+What if my notice period is too short?

The wizard computes the days between your service date and effective date and warns you prominently — with the statute — if you're below your state's minimum. We never block you (you may have circumstances we can't account for), but a too-short notice may be unenforceable.

+How do I get a PDF?

The preview is a print-perfect US Letter page. After unlocking, click Print / Save as PDF — your browser produces the final single-page PDF. Nothing to install, nothing uploaded to us.

+Are the laws up to date?

The dataset is versioned (see the footer) and compiled July 2026. Landlord–tenant law changes frequently and cities can add stricter rules, so every notice carries the statute citation and a reminder to verify before serving. When in doubt, have an attorney review it.

Two minutes from now, your notice is ready to serve.

Create your notice →