How much notice a landlord must give before filing to evict in Maryland, by reason. General information, not legal advice — local city rules can override.
Nonpayment of rent (pay or quit)
10 days
No-cause (month-to-month)
60 days (Baltimore City & Montgomery Co.: 30)
Lease violation (cure or quit)
30 days (14 if imminent danger)
Maryland note: Maryland's 2024 Renters' Rights & Stabilization Act added the 10-day pre-filing nonpayment notice that didn't previously exist. Source: Md. Real Prop. §§ 8-401, 8-402(c), 8-402.1.
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What to do if you got an eviction notice in Maryland
Don't move out in a panic — a notice is not a court order, and you usually have until the period above (and a court hearing) before anything happens.
If it's nonpayment and you can pay, paying in full often stops the eviction; check whether your state lets you "pay and stay."
If the landlord locks you out or shuts off utilities, that's illegal self-help eviction — document it and contact local legal aid.
Check the notice names the landlord, states a reason where required, and gives the correct period — defects can get the case dismissed.
True in every state
An eviction notice is NOT an eviction — it's only step one. If you don't leave or cure, the landlord must sue (an 'unlawful detainer' / 'summary process' / 'forcible entry and detainer' case) and win before you can be removed.
Only a court order, enforced by a sheriff or marshal, can physically remove you. A landlord can never lawfully carry out the removal themselves.
'Self-help' eviction is illegal everywhere: changing locks, shutting off utilities, removing doors, or putting your belongings on the curb without a court order exposes the landlord to penalties and damages.
Notice requirements differ by the reason — nonpayment of rent, a curable lease violation, and a no-cause termination each carry different (often very different) notice periods.
You have the right to a court hearing and may have defenses — improper notice, retaliation, discrimination, uninhabitable conditions, or having already paid. An eviction is not automatic.
Local and city ordinances can require LONGER notice than state law — rent-control and just-cause cities (much of California, NYC, Chicago/Cook County, Portland) frequently override the state default.
Proper written notice, correctly served, is a prerequisite — if the landlord skips it or serves it improperly, a court can dismiss the case and force a restart.
Retaliatory and discriminatory evictions are prohibited under federal and most state law — a landlord generally can't evict you for exercising a legal right like requesting repairs.
FAQ
How much notice does a landlord have to give in Maryland?
In Maryland the standard notice is 10 days for nonpayment of rent and 60 days (Baltimore City & Montgomery Co.: 30) to end a month-to-month tenancy with no cause. Local rent-control or just-cause ordinances can require longer notice, and the notice for a lease violation differs again.
Can a landlord evict you without notice in Maryland?
Generally no — proper written notice, correctly served, is a prerequisite, and an eviction notice is only step one. A landlord still has to file an eviction case and win in court before a sheriff can remove you. Lockouts and utility shutoffs are illegal everywhere.
Is an eviction notice the same as being evicted in Maryland?
No. The notice just starts the clock. If you don't move or cure, the landlord must sue and get a court order — only a sheriff or marshal with that order can actually remove you, and you can raise defenses at the hearing.