๐Ÿ  Florida Operations Forms: Notice of Non-Renewal Notice to Enter Tenant Notice to Vacate All Florida Forms

Free Florida Notice of Non-Renewal

The written notice Florida landlords use to end a periodic tenancy or decline to renew a fixed-term lease. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 sets the notice period: 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies. Built for Florida landlords.

California Non-Renewal Notice ยง 83.57 Tiered Notice Free PDF 2026 Edition
๐Ÿ“…WRITTEN NOTICE REQUIRED: Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 requires written notice to terminate a periodic tenancy in Florida. 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies. The notice must specify the termination date and be properly served.
โš SERVICE METHODS: Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56 authorizes personal delivery, substituted service plus mailing, or posting plus mailing. Mailing alone is generally not sufficient. Email and text alone are not authorized for termination notices.
๐Ÿšช

Notice of Non-Renewal is one of the highest-stakes routine documents in Florida landlord-tenant practice. A defective notice โ€” wrong period, improper service, missing required information โ€” cannot support an eviction action, forcing the landlord to start over and pushing recovery of possession back by months. Florida non-renewal practice has technical requirements: cumulative occupancy controls notice period; the clock starts at delivery; service must follow Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56; the notice must be in writing with all required elements. The form on this page handles the mechanics correctly; the page itself walks through the analysis step by step.

CA Notice Period

15 / 60 days

Authority

ยง 83.57

Allowed Hours

Business hours

Emergency

No notice required

By Tenant Screening Background Check Editorial Team
Form TypeRoutine Operations
StateCalifornia
Authorityยง 83.57
Updated2026

A Florida Notice of Non-Renewal is the written notice a landlord uses to end a periodic tenancy or to communicate that a fixed-term lease will not be renewed at expiration. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 sets the notice-period requirements: 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies. Service must follow Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56. Getting the notice right is high-stakes work: a defective notice cannot support an eviction action, and the landlord must start over with a corrected notice โ€” pushing recovery of possession back by months. The form on this page handles the mechanics; the rest of this guide walks through the requirements.

Watch: Florida Notice of Non-Renewal explained
โ–ถ Watch: Florida Notice of Non-Renewal โ€” ยง 83.57 explained
ยง 83.57
Florida termination-notice statute
24 hrs
presumed reasonable notice period
2 min
to fill out and download the PDF

๐Ÿ“… Notice Period Calculator

Enter the date you’ll deliver the notice. The calculator shows the earliest valid termination date under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57.

Earliest valid termination date

โ€”

โœŽ Complete Your Florida Notice of Non-Renewal

ยง 83.57 requires 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies. The clock starts at delivery, not at preparation. Pick a termination date that’s at least the required period after the planned delivery date. The termination date should align with the end of a rental period for periodic tenancies.

1 ยท Notice Dates

2 ยท Tenant & Property

3 ยท Landlord Contact

๐Ÿ“‹ Before You Serve โ€” Pre-Send Checklist

You’ve verified the notice period required by Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 (7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies)
You’ve calculated the cumulative tenancy correctly (not just the current lease term)
The termination date is a specific calendar date at least the required period after delivery
The termination date aligns with the end of a rental period (for periodic tenancies)
All adult tenants named on the lease are named on the notice
The lease does not require longer notice than the statutory minimum (if it does, give the longer period)
You’re not within the protected period for retaliation under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64 (where applicable)
You’ll serve by personal delivery, substituted service plus mailing, or posting plus mailing under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56 โ€” not by mail or email alone
You’ll document the service date, time, method, and circumstances for the file
You’ll retain copies of the notice, proof of service, and the lease for evidence in any later proceeding

What a Notice of Non-Renewal does

A Florida Notice of Non-Renewal is the document that ends a residential tenancy without alleging tenant fault. It is the formal communication that the tenancy will not continue past the date specified in the notice. Two distinct scenarios trigger its use: (1) ending a periodic (month-to-month) tenancy, and (2) declining to renew a fixed-term lease at expiration.

The notice is procedurally similar to other Florida eviction-related notices, but substantively different. A pay-rent-or-quit notice alleges nonpayment. A cure-or-quit notice alleges a curable lease breach. A notice of non-renewal does not necessarily allege any wrongdoing โ€” it simply ends the tenancy at the end of the notice period.

What the notice accomplishes practically: it establishes the date on which the tenant’s legal right to occupy the premises ends. After that date, if the tenant has not vacated, the landlord may file an unlawful detainer or eviction action to recover possession. The non-renewal notice is the precondition to the eviction action โ€” without it (or with a defective version), the landlord cannot lawfully recover possession of a tenancy that has not otherwise been forfeited.

The form on this page produces a Notice of Non-Renewal that satisfies Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 and complies with Florida’s notice-period requirements. The mechanical accuracy of the document is critical: a notice that gets the period wrong, omits required information, or fails proper service is unenforceable, and the landlord must start over.

Florida non-renewal of a residential tenancy operates under several layered sources of law. Three primary frameworks apply to most non-renewal notices in this state.

1. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 โ€” the notice-period statute. This is the primary statute setting the required advance notice for terminating a residential periodic tenancy. The notice period is 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies. The period runs from the date of delivery to the termination date stated in the notice, not from the date the notice was prepared.

2. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56 โ€” service of termination notices. This statute sets out the authorized methods for delivering a non-renewal notice, typically including personal delivery, substituted service plus mailing, or posting plus mailing. Florida courts generally do not accept mailing alone or electronic notice (email/text) as adequate service for a termination notice.

3. Implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. Independent of any specific statute, every Florida residential lease carries an implied covenant that the tenant will have peaceful, exclusive possession of the premises for the duration of the tenancy. A non-renewal notice that is part of a pattern of harassment, retaliation, or discrimination breaches this covenant and exposes the landlord to claims for damages, attorney’s fees, and equitable relief.

Anti-retaliation protections. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64 prohibits a landlord from retaliating against a tenant for asserting rights under Florida landlord-tenant law. A non-renewal notice issued shortly after protected tenant conduct (habitability complaint, code-enforcement contact, organizing or joining a tenant association) can create a presumption of retaliation that the landlord must overcome with evidence of a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason.

Anti-discrimination protections โ€” federal Fair Housing Act and Florida fair housing law. A non-renewal notice that targets a tenant based on a protected class (race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, disability, and source of income in some jurisdictions) violates fair housing law regardless of whether the technical notice-period requirements are met. Disparate-impact analysis can also reach facially neutral policies that disproportionately affect a protected class.

Notice period under ยง 83.57

Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 sets the notice period for terminating a residential periodic tenancy in Florida. In Florida, the notice-period requirement is keyed to tenancy duration. The schedule below sets out the required notice for different tenancy types.

Tenancy lengthRequired noticeSource
week-to-week7 days written noticeFla. Stat. ยง 83.57
month-to-month15 days written noticeFla. Stat. ยง 83.57
quarter-to-quarter30 days written noticeFla. Stat. ยง 83.57
year-to-year60 days written noticeFla. Stat. ยง 83.57

The clock starts at delivery. The notice period runs from the date the tenant has actual or presumed notice โ€” typically the date of personal delivery, or the date the substituted service or posting and mailing combination is complete. The notice must specify a termination date that falls at or after the end of the required period. A notice that calculates the date wrong (for example, counting from the date of preparation rather than the date of service) is defective and unenforceable.

Cumulative occupancy controls โ€” not lease term. A tenant who has occupied the same unit for an extended period under sequential leases generally has a tenancy measured by cumulative occupancy. Resetting the lease clock by signing a new agreement does not reset the notice period for purposes of ยง 83.57. This catches landlords who assume a fresh fixed-term lease creates a fresh tenancy for notice purposes.

Fixed-term leases โ€” non-renewal vs. termination. A fixed-term lease typically expires by its own terms on the last day of the term. If the lease itself requires the landlord to give advance notice of non-renewal, failing to give that notice may convert the tenancy to month-to-month on the same terms. Check the lease before assuming the fixed term simply expires.

The notice cannot be shortened by lease provision. A lease term that purports to authorize less than the statutory notice period is void and unenforceable as to that provision. The tenant can consent to a shorter period at the time the notice is issued, but cannot prospectively waive the ยง 83.57 minimum in advance through a lease.

The notice can be lengthened by lease provision. A lease that requires the landlord to give 90 days notice of non-renewal is enforceable โ€” the landlord must give the longer period the lease specifies. Longer-notice lease provisions are common in larger rental developments and corporate-owned properties.

Authorized delivery methods

Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56 sets out the authorized methods for serving a notice of non-renewal in Florida. Mailing alone is generally not sufficient โ€” the notice must be served by personal delivery, by substituted service plus mailing, or by posting plus mailing. The chosen method affects when the notice period begins.

MethodProcedureEffective date
Personal deliveryHand the notice directly to the tenant.Date of personal delivery โ€” clock starts immediately
Substituted service plus mailingLeave the notice with a person of suitable age and discretion at the tenant’s residence (an adult occupant or guest) AND mail a copy to the tenant at the residence.Date of substituted service โ€” but the tenant must have actual receipt or a reasonable opportunity for receipt
Posting plus mailingAffix the notice in a conspicuous place at the residence (front door is standard) AND mail a copy to the tenant at the residence.Date of posting and mailing โ€” both must be complete
Mailing aloneGenerally NOT sufficient for residential termination notices in Florida. Mailing is the supplement to substituted service or posting, not a standalone method.โ€”
Email or text aloneNOT an authorized method under Florida law, even if the lease purports to authorize electronic service. Courts have held electronic-only service insufficient for termination notices.โ€”

Personal delivery is the cleanest and most defensible. Whenever practical, deliver the notice personally to the tenant. Document the date, time, and circumstances of delivery โ€” ideally with a witness or photo. Personal delivery starts the notice clock immediately, eliminating any dispute about when the period began.

Substituted service requires both steps. A landlord who leaves the notice with the tenant’s adult son but does not also mail a copy has not perfected service. Both steps must be completed for substituted service to be effective. The mailing must be by ordinary first-class mail to the tenant at the rental address.

Posting plus mailing is the fallback when personal contact is not possible. If the tenant is not home and no adult occupant is present, the landlord may post the notice in a conspicuous place at the residence and mail a copy. Photograph the posting in place for the file. The notice must be in a location where the tenant would reasonably discover it โ€” the front door of the unit is standard.

Document delivery rigorously. Whatever method is used, the landlord should document the date, time, method, and circumstances of delivery. The landlord’s defense in any later challenge to the notice โ€” including in an unlawful detainer or eviction proceeding โ€” depends almost entirely on this documentation. Keep delivery documentation in the property file for the duration of the tenancy plus the applicable statute of limitations.

Required information for the notice

Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 does not specify a precise content requirement for non-renewal notices, but settled Florida practice and case law establish a minimum set of elements the notice must contain.

ElementWhy it’s required
Date of the noticeEstablishes the timeline; required for proof of service
Names of all tenantsThe notice must run against every adult tenant on the lease (or all named occupants if no formal lease)
Property addressIdentifies the specific premises being terminated
Termination dateMust be at least the required period after delivery; specific calendar date
Statutory authorityReference to Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 establishes the legal basis
Landlord name and contactRequired for any tenant response or follow-up
SignatureMust be signed by the landlord or authorized agent
Method of serviceNotice itself doesn’t require this, but proof of service should be prepared and retained

Termination date must be calculated correctly. The date stated in the notice as the termination date must be at least the statutory required number of days after the date of delivery. A notice that says “tenancy terminates X days from the date of this notice” without identifying a specific calendar date creates ambiguity and is on weaker enforcement ground. Pick a specific calendar date and verify the math.

The landlord’s identity must be unambiguous. If a property-management company is serving the notice on behalf of an owner, the notice should make that relationship clear. A notice signed in an ambiguous capacity invites disputes about authority.

Documentation supports the notice. Beyond the notice itself, the landlord should retain a copy of the lease (showing the tenancy duration and terms), a record of delivery (proof of service), and any communications with the tenant about the non-renewal. These documents become evidence if the tenant disputes the notice.

Common mistakes that void the notice

Calculating the notice period from the wrong date

The notice period runs from the date of delivery, not from the date the notice was prepared, signed, or dated. A notice signed on March 1, served on March 15, with a termination date that does not account for the service date as the start of the clock is defective. The miscalculation is one of the most common reasons notices fail in unlawful detainer or eviction proceedings.

Counting cumulative occupancy wrong

For states with tiered notice periods, the longer period applies to tenancies measured by cumulative occupancy. A landlord who measures from the most recent lease renewal โ€” rather than from the original start of the tenancy โ€” applies the wrong period. Check the cumulative tenancy length carefully.

Mailing-only service

Florida requires personal delivery, substituted service plus mailing, or posting plus mailing. Mailing alone is generally not sufficient. Landlords who mail the notice and assume electronic-delivery confirmation is enough have not perfected service.

Email or text-only delivery

Email and text are not authorized methods of service for termination notices in Florida, even if the lease purports to authorize electronic service. A notice delivered only by email or text is generally void.

Issuing a non-renewal during a protected period

Under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64, a non-renewal that follows protected tenant conduct (habitability complaint, code-enforcement contact, tenant union activity) can be presumed retaliatory. Issuing a non-renewal within the protected period without a documented legitimate reason invites a retaliation claim and shifts the burden of proof to the landlord.

Targeting a tenant in a protected class

Even where the technical notice-period requirements are met, a non-renewal that targets a tenant based on race, religion, national origin, familial status (including pregnancy or having children), disability, source of income, or other protected characteristics under federal and Florida fair housing law is illegal. Disparate-impact analysis can also reach facially neutral patterns. A pattern of non-renewals concentrated in one demographic exposes the landlord to fair housing claims.

Failing to identify all tenants on the notice

Every adult tenant named on the lease should be named on the non-renewal notice. A notice that omits one of the named tenants is on weaker ground and may not support an eviction action against the omitted tenant. Some courts also require service on each named tenant individually.

Wrong termination date for the rental period

For periodic tenancies, the termination date should fall at the end of a rental period, not in the middle. A notice that terminates the tenancy mid-month for a month-to-month tenancy may not support an eviction until the end of the next rental period. Florida courts vary on how strictly this is enforced, but the safer practice is to align termination with the end of a rental period.

Not retaining a copy of the notice and proof of service

The notice and proof of service are the landlord’s primary evidence in any later eviction proceeding. Failing to retain copies leaves the landlord without the foundation to prove proper notice was given. Maintain the notice, proof of service, and any related communications in the property file.

Tenant remedies for defective notice

A Florida tenant who receives a defective non-renewal notice โ€” wrong period, improper service, missing required information, or retaliatory or discriminatory motive โ€” has multiple potential remedies. Understanding these helps landlords appreciate why getting the notice right matters.

Affirmative defense in eviction proceedings

The most common scenario: the landlord serves a defective notice, the tenant does not vacate by the termination date, the landlord files an eviction action, and the tenant raises the defective notice as an affirmative defense. If the defense succeeds, the action is dismissed and the landlord must serve a corrected notice and start over. The tenant typically remains in possession during the do-over and may be entitled to attorney’s fees if the lease has a fees clause.

Anti-retaliation damages

If the non-renewal was retaliatory under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64 (issued in response to protected tenant conduct, such as habitability complaints, code-enforcement contacts, or tenant-union activity), the tenant can recover actual damages, attorney’s fees, and statutory penalties. The presumption of retaliation that attaches to a non-renewal following protected conduct shifts the burden to the landlord to prove a non-retaliatory reason.

Fair housing claims โ€” federal FHA and Florida fair housing law

A non-renewal that targets a tenant based on a protected class violates state and federal fair housing law independent of any notice-period issue. Remedies include actual damages, statutory penalties, attorney’s fees, and injunctive relief. HUD accepts complaints; private actions are also available.

Constructive eviction and quiet-enjoyment claims

A non-renewal that is part of a pattern of harassment โ€” repeated baseless notices, threats, illegal entry, utility shutoffs โ€” supports a constructive-eviction claim and a breach of the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. These claims provide damages independent of the notice itself and can be raised in any eviction action or in a separate civil action.

Bottom line for landlords: the cost of getting a non-renewal notice right is small; the cost of getting it wrong can be substantial. A defective notice typically delays recovery of possession by several months (during the redo plus any eviction proceeding), exposes the landlord to attorney’s fees, and may trigger fair-housing or retaliation claims if the defects suggest bad faith. The form on this page handles the mechanics; the analysis above is the legal context.

Get the full Florida landlord-tenant picture

Notice of Non-Renewal is one of the highest-stakes routine documents in California landlord-tenant practice. Our California habitability law guide and tenant-rights guide cover the broader framework โ€” implied warranty of habitability, repair-and-deduct remedies, retaliation protections, and the operational rhythm of California residential tenancy.

Read Florida habitability laws

Florida statute reference table

StatuteSubjectKey requirement
Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57Termination notice for periodic tenancies7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies
Fla. Stat. ยง 83.575Fixed-term lease non-renewalLease-driven framework
Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56Service of termination noticesPersonal delivery, substituted service plus mailing, posting plus mailing
Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64Anti-retaliationProhibits non-renewal in retaliation for protected tenant conduct
42 U.S.C. ยง 3601 et seq.Fair Housing Act โ€” federalFederal-level fair housing protections; HUD enforcement

Florida statute citations are to the official code as referenced. Local ordinances may layer additional requirements on top of state law and should be consulted independently.

Frequently asked questions

How much notice do I have to give to non-renew a Florida tenancy?
Quick answer: 7 days for week-to-week tenancies; 15 days for month-to-month tenancies; 30 days for quarter-to-quarter tenancies; 60 days for year-to-year tenancies.The period runs from the date of delivery โ€” not from the date the notice was prepared. Cumulative occupancy controls. The notice cannot be shortened by lease provision; it can be lengthened.
Do I need to give a reason for non-renewing the tenancy?
Generally no, for Florida tenancies that are not covered by a local just-cause ordinance. The 30/60-day notice period under Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 is sufficient and no reason is required. However, anti-retaliation and fair-housing rules still apply โ€” the notice cannot be retaliatory or discriminatory even when no specific reason is required.
How do I serve the notice?
Fla. Stat. ยง 83.56 authorizes the following methods: personal delivery to the tenant; substituted service on a person of suitable age and discretion at the residence plus mailing a copy; or posting in a conspicuous place plus mailing. Mailing alone is generally not sufficient. Email and text alone are not authorized for termination notices. Personal delivery is the cleanest and most defensible.
What happens if my fixed-term lease expires?
A fixed-term lease typically expires by its own terms. If the lease itself requires advance notice of non-renewal, failing to give that notice may convert the tenancy to month-to-month on the same terms. Check the lease before assuming the fixed term simply expires.
Can a tenant waive the notice period in advance?
No โ€” a lease provision purporting to authorize less than the statutory notice period is void. The tenant can consent to a shorter period at the time the notice is issued (a contemporaneous agreement to vacate sooner in exchange for some consideration), but cannot prospectively waive the ยง 83.57 minimum through a lease.
What if the tenant has been a long-term resident?
Long-term tenants typically receive the longest notice period under the statute (where tiered). In Florida, tenancies of one year or longer require 60 days notice.
What happens if my notice is defective?
A defective notice (wrong period, improper service, missing required information) generally cannot support an eviction action. If the tenant raises the defect as a defense and the court agrees, the eviction is dismissed and the landlord must serve a corrected notice and start the period over. The tenant typically remains in possession during the redo. Defective notices may also expose the landlord to attorney’s fees.
Can I issue a non-renewal in retaliation for a tenant complaint?
No. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.64 prohibits non-renewal in retaliation for tenant exercise of protected rights. Issuing a non-renewal that the court finds was retaliatory exposes the landlord to damages, attorney’s fees, and potential statutory penalties.
Does a non-renewal need to be in writing?
Yes. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 requires written notice of termination. Oral notice โ€” even if clearly given and acknowledged by the tenant โ€” does not satisfy the statute and cannot support an eviction action.
What if my lease specifies a different notice period?
A lease that requires more notice than the statute (for example, 90 days where the statute requires 30) is enforceable โ€” the landlord must give the longer period. A lease that requires less notice than the statute is void as to that provision; the statutory minimum still applies.

When to consult an attorney

Most Florida non-renewals are routine and never need an attorney. If the tenant has raised retaliation or fair-housing claims, the property is in a city with a local just-cause ordinance, the tenancy involves long-term occupants or complicated lease history, or you suspect the tenant may contest the notice, consult a Florida landlord-tenant attorney before serving. A clean ยง 83.57 procedure with documented service and contemporaneous file records is the foundation of a defensible non-renewal; an attorney’s review at the right moment is far cheaper than defending a defective notice in eviction proceedings.

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Sources cited on this page

  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.1 (termination notice periods โ€” 30 / 60 days)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2 (Tenant Protection Act of 2019 / AB 1482 โ€” just cause requirement)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2(b)(1) (eleven enumerated at-fault just-cause grounds)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2(b)(2) (four enumerated no-fault just-cause grounds โ€” owner move-in, Ellis withdrawal, government order, substantial remodel)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2(d) (relocation-assistance requirement for no-fault terminations)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2(e) (exemptions from AB 1482 โ€” single-family / condo / duplex / under-15-years / dorms)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1946.2(g) (misuse damages โ€” treble damages plus attorney’s fees)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1162 (authorized methods of service for termination notices)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1942.5 (anti-retaliation โ€” 180-day presumption)
  • California Government Code ยง 12955 et seq. (Fair Employment and Housing Act โ€” state fair housing)
  • 42 U.S.C. ยง 3601 et seq. (federal Fair Housing Act)
  • California Government Code ยง 7060 et seq. (Ellis Act โ€” withdrawal-from-market procedure)
  • Los Angeles RSO / JCO (city-level just-cause and relocation requirements)
  • San Francisco Rent Ordinance (city-level just-cause and relocation requirements)
  • Oakland Just Cause for Eviction Ordinance (city-level just-cause requirements)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1951.3 (abandonment procedure)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1940.2 (anti-harassment; statutory penalties up to two thousand dollars)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1942.5 (retaliatory eviction prohibition)
  • California Civil Code ยง 1941 (implied warranty of habitability โ€” repair obligation)
  • California Civil Code ยง 789.3 (self-help eviction prohibition; statutory per-day damages)
  • Implied covenant of quiet enjoyment (common law; every California residential lease)
  • California Constitution Article I ยง 1 (privacy)
  • Local ordinances: San Francisco, Berkeley, and other cities with rent-control or just-cause requirements that may affect entry rules

This form and the accompanying guidance are provided for general informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Florida landlord-tenant law has technical requirements that can change with legislation and case law. Fla. Stat. ยง 83.57 and related provisions vary in interpretation by jurisdiction and over time. Specific situations โ€” long-term tenancies, fixed-term leases with renewal-notice clauses, retaliation and fair-housing defenses, local ordinance overlays โ€” depend on facts that this general guidance cannot fully address. Always verify current requirements with the Florida statute book, applicable local ordinances, or a qualified Florida landlord-tenant attorney before relying on this notice in any contested or sensitive situation. Review Florida eviction notice laws.