The notices and their periods
- 3-Day Notice to Pay or Quit — for nonpayment (Wyo. Stat. § 1-21-1002, § 1-21-1003) — three days to pay the full balance (plus any interest and late fees) or move out.
- 3-Day Notice to Comply or Quit — for a curable lease violation (§ 1-21-1003) — three days to fix the problem. The landlord may treat a serious violation as non-curable and require the tenant to leave in 3 days.
- 3-Day Notice to Quit (no cure) — for serious or non-curable violations — three days to vacate with no chance to fix.
Ending a tenancy and serving notice
Wyoming's statutes don't set a fixed notice period for ending a periodic tenancy without cause; the customary practice is one rental period — typically about 30 days for a month-to-month tenancy. The lease may specify the period.
Notice should be hand-delivered if possible, or left at the residence or business. After the notice period, the landlord files a Forcible Entry and Detainer action in circuit court. The Wyoming Residential Rental Property Act governs.
Fast and landlord-friendly
Wyoming runs almost everything on a 3-day clock — nonpayment and lease violations alike — and lets the landlord decide whether a violation is curable. Uncontested cases often resolve in three to four weeks. Notably, Wyoming's statutes don't fix a no-cause notice period for periodic tenancies, so a month-to-month termination follows the lease or the customary one rental period.
Create a Wyoming eviction notice in 60 seconds
Your details filled in, the right notice period stated, delivery and confirmation handled.
Create My Letter — $9Common questions
How many days' notice for nonpayment in Wyoming?
Three days to pay or quit (Wyo. Stat. § 1-21-1003).
How long to fix a lease violation in Wyoming?
Three days to comply (§ 1-21-1003) — though the landlord may treat a serious violation as non-curable.
How do I end a month-to-month tenancy in Wyoming?
Wyoming sets no fixed statutory period; the customary practice is one rental period (about 30 days), or whatever the lease specifies.
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 · Kansas · New Mexico · Nebraska · Idaho · West Virginia · Colorado · Hawaii · New Hampshire · Maine · Montana · Rhode Island · Delaware · South Dakota · North Dakota · Alaska · Vermont · 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.