Eviction Notices

Kansas Eviction Notice Rules

Kansas pairs a short 3-day nonpayment notice with a distinctive “14-day-cure-within-30” structure for lease violations.

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Updated June 2026 · 3 min read · Custom to your state

The notices and their periods

Ending a tenancy and serving notice

To end a month-to-month tenancy without cause, give 30 days' written notice ending on a rent-due date (K.S.A. § 58-2570(b)).

After the notice period, the landlord files an eviction (forcible detainer) action in the district court of the county where the property sits.

The 14-in-30 cure window

Kansas's lease-violation notice is a 30-day notice with a 14-day cure window inside it: the tenant must fix the problem within the first 14 days, or the tenancy ends at day 30. A good-faith but incomplete cure within 14 days can preserve the tenancy — but if the same problem recurs, the landlord can move to a 30-day no-cure notice.

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Common questions

How many days' notice for nonpayment in Kansas?
Three days to pay or quit (K.S.A. § 58-2564(b)) — plus two more if the notice is mailed.

How long to fix a lease violation in Kansas?
14 days to cure within a 30-day notice (K.S.A. § 58-2564(a)); the tenancy ends at 30 days if uncured.

How do I end a month-to-month tenancy in Kansas?
Give 30 days' written notice ending on a rent-due date (§ 58-2570(b)).

More notice types: Pay or Quit · Cure or Quit · Unconditional Quit · eviction notices overview. By state: California · Texas · Florida · New York · Illinois · Pennsylvania · Ohio · Georgia · North Carolina · Michigan · New Jersey · Virginia · Washington · Arizona · Massachusetts · Tennessee · Indiana · Missouri · Maryland · Wisconsin · Minnesota · South Carolina · Alabama · Louisiana · Kentucky · Oregon · Oklahoma · Connecticut · Utah · Nevada · Iowa · Arkansas · Mississippi · New Mexico · Nebraska · Idaho · West Virginia · Colorado · Hawaii · New Hampshire · Maine · Montana · Rhode Island · Delaware · South Dakota · North Dakota · Alaska · Vermont · Wyoming · Washington, D.C..

WriteMyNotice.com is a self-help document preparation service, not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice. Eviction rules are strict and vary by state, county, and city — many cities add rent-control or just-cause requirements on top of state law, and an improper or mistimed notice can get an eviction case delayed or dismissed. Verify the current requirements for your property's location and, for contested or high-stakes evictions, consult a landlord-tenant attorney. Statute references verified June 2026.

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