How it's counted: Written notice one full rental period in advance, ending on a PERIOD BOUNDARY (e.g., notice by March 31 to exit April 30).
How the deadline actually works in Wyoming
Descriptive-only state. Wyoming statutes do not set a notice period for month-to-month termination; the Title 1, ch. 21 provisions some guides cite are landlord-side eviction procedure. Either party gives one full rental period's written notice aligned to a period boundary — the practice Wyoming courts expect.
Worked example: rent due on the 1st, written notice delivered June 10. The earliest compliant termination date is July 31, 2026 — notice must clear the required period and land on a rental-period boundary, which is the step most people miss. Our generator computes this date from your actual rent schedule.
Your lease can require more
State law is the floor, not the ceiling. If your lease requires more notice than the statute (60 days is common in larger complexes), the longer period controls. Read the termination or notice clause before sending anything — a proper letter satisfies both requirements at once.
What notice does your landlord owe you?
The other direction matters too: a Wyoming landlord ending a month-to-month tenancy generally owes the tenant 30 days by the same convention (Common-law rule; eviction procedure under Wyo. Stat. tit. 1, ch. 21).
Deliver it so it counts
Use a method that creates a record: hand delivery with a signed acknowledgement, or certified mail with return receipt. If your lease names a required delivery method, use that one. Keep a copy of the letter and the receipt — together they are your proof that notice was proper and on time.
Your Wyoming notice, dated correctly, in 60 seconds
State rule applied, termination date computed from your rent schedule, deposit rights reserved.
Create My Notice — $9Primary source: official statute text / state guidance.
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WriteMyNotice.com is a self-help document preparation service, not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice. Statutes change and leases can require more notice than state law — always check your lease and, for significant matters, consult a licensed attorney in your state. Statute references verified June 2026.