Alabama Unconditional Quit Notice (7-Day)
Create a free Alabama unconditional quit notice. Alabama requires a 7-day unconditional quit notice. Fill in the details, preview it live, and download a PDF or email it.
Alabama requirement
Alabama requires a 7-day unconditional quit notice. Alabama requires a written termination notice even for non-curable conduct; it does NOT provide a 0-day/immediate quit for residential tenancies. Under Ala. Code 35-9A-421(d), certain acts are non-curable and the landlord 'may terminate the rental agreement upon a seven-day notice' with no right to remedy unless the landlord consents: (1) illegal drug activity in the unit/common areas, (2) illegal firearm use/discharge on the premises, (3) criminal assault of a tenant or guest, and (4) a breach involving substantially the same acts as a prior breach the landlord noticed and the tenant cured, IF the second breach occurs within SIX months of the first. Separately, an intentional misrepresentation of a material fact in the lease/application (421(a)) cannot be cured. Note the statute's wording for these 421(d) non-curable defaults is 'seven-day notice' (it does NOT say 'business days,' unlike the curable 421(a)/(b) provisions). Also note: no breach may be cured by a tenant more than TWO times in any 12-month period absent the landlord's express written consent. Set as 7 because that is the operative notice period; the distinguishing feature is the absence of a cure right, not a shorter clock.
Tenant Name(s)
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⚠ Alabama requires a 7-day notice for a unconditional quit notice; the count runs from the date of SERVICE, and some states exclude weekends/holidays — verify before relying on a date. Alabama requires a written termination notice even for non-curable conduct; it does NOT provide a 0-day/immediate quit for residential tenancies. Under Ala. Code 35-9A-421(d), certain acts are non-curable and the landlord 'may terminate the rental agreement upon a seven-day notice' with no right to remedy unless the landlord consents: (1) illegal drug activity in the unit/common areas, (2) illegal firearm use/discharge on the premises, (3) criminal assault of a tenant or guest, and (4) a breach involving substantially the same acts as a prior breach the landlord noticed and the tenant cured, IF the second breach occurs within SIX months of the first. Separately, an intentional misrepresentation of a material fact in the lease/application (421(a)) cannot be cured. Note the statute's wording for these 421(d) non-curable defaults is 'seven-day notice' (it does NOT say 'business days,' unlike the curable 421(a)/(b) provisions). Also note: no breach may be cured by a tenant more than TWO times in any 12-month period absent the landlord's express written consent. Set as 7 because that is the operative notice period; the distinguishing feature is the absence of a cure right, not a shorter clock.
Unconditional Quit Notice (Alabama)
UNCONDITIONAL QUIT NOTICE
Date of Notice: ________________
From (Landlord/Agent): [LANDLORD/AGENT NAME], [LANDLORD ADDRESS]
To: [TENANT NAME(S)], Tenant(s) in possession of: [PROPERTY ADDRESS]
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that, because of the following: [state the specific serious or repeated violation / illegal activity, with dates and facts], your tenancy is terminated. You are required to vacate and surrender possession of the property within 7 days after this notice is served on you. This notice does not give an opportunity to cure.
IMPORTANT: An unconditional (no-cure) notice is valid only for the serious or non-curable grounds your state specifically allows. Confirm this situation qualifies — otherwise a notice that gives a chance to cure may be required.
If you do not comply with this notice within the time stated, the landlord may begin legal proceedings to recover possession of the property under Ala. Code 35-9A-421 (noncompliance with rental agreement; failure to pay rent) and 35-9A-441 (periodic tenancy; holdover remedies), Alabama Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Title 35, Chapter 9A.
Only a court can order you to move out. The landlord may NOT lock you out, remove your belongings, or shut off your utilities; doing so is illegal.
This notice is given without waiving, and the landlord expressly reserves, all other rights and remedies, including the right to recover unpaid rent and damages.
How this notice may be served: The Act requires written notice 'delivered' to the tenant, and the 421 notice periods run from the tenant's RECEIPT ('after receipt of the notice'). Note that the general notice-receipt rules in Ala. Code 35-9A-144 expressly DO NOT apply to a notice to terminate a tenancy or evict a tenant (35-9A-144(e)). Service of the eviction (unlawful detainer) action and related termination notices is governed by the eviction-action statute (35-9A-461) and the Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure / unlawful detainer service rules, which contemplate personal service or, where the tenant cannot be found, posting a copy on the premises door plus first-class mail by the sheriff/process server (service by posting complete as of the date of mailing). Best practice is personal delivery plus first-class mail and documenting the receipt date. (The spec's prior citation to 35-9A-161 was incorrect; 35-9A-161 covers terms and conditions of the rental agreement, not service.)
_______________________________________
[LANDLORD/AGENT NAME] — Landlord / Authorized Agent
[LANDLORD ADDRESS]
Date: ________________
PROOF OF SERVICE
I served this notice on the tenant(s) on ____________ (date).
Method of service (use a method permitted in your state — see the service note above):
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________ Date: ____________
Signature of person serving the notice
Email yourself a copy (PDF)
Self-help template, not legal advice. You cannot remove a tenant yourself — serve a proper notice and, if needed, file in court. Confirm Alabama and local rules first.
Alabama Unconditional Quit Notice Rules
An Unconditional Quit Notice is the harshest eviction notice. It orders the tenant to move out without a chance to fix the problem, and is generally reserved for serious situations such as illegal activity, major property damage, or repeat violations. States limit when it can be used.
Alabama requires a 7-day unconditional quit notice. Alabama requires a written termination notice even for non-curable conduct; it does NOT provide a 0-day/immediate quit for residential tenancies. Under Ala. Code 35-9A-421(d), certain acts are non-curable and the landlord 'may terminate the rental agreement upon a seven-day notice' with no right to remedy unless the landlord consents: (1) illegal drug activity in the unit/common areas, (2) illegal firearm use/discharge on the premises, (3) criminal assault of a tenant or guest, and (4) a breach involving substantially the same acts as a prior breach the landlord noticed and the tenant cured, IF the second breach occurs within SIX months of the first. Separately, an intentional misrepresentation of a material fact in the lease/application (421(a)) cannot be cured. Note the statute's wording for these 421(d) non-curable defaults is 'seven-day notice' (it does NOT say 'business days,' unlike the curable 421(a)/(b) provisions). Also note: no breach may be cured by a tenant more than TWO times in any 12-month period absent the landlord's express written consent. Set as 7 because that is the operative notice period; the distinguishing feature is the absence of a cure right, not a shorter clock. The notice is served under Ala. Code 35-9A-421 (noncompliance with rental agreement; failure to pay rent) and 35-9A-441 (periodic tenancy; holdover remedies), Alabama Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, Title 35, Chapter 9A.
How to Serve a Unconditional Quit Notice in Alabama
The Act requires written notice 'delivered' to the tenant, and the 421 notice periods run from the tenant's RECEIPT ('after receipt of the notice'). Note that the general notice-receipt rules in Ala. Code 35-9A-144 expressly DO NOT apply to a notice to terminate a tenancy or evict a tenant (35-9A-144(e)). Service of the eviction (unlawful detainer) action and related termination notices is governed by the eviction-action statute (35-9A-461) and the Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure / unlawful detainer service rules, which contemplate personal service or, where the tenant cannot be found, posting a copy on the premises door plus first-class mail by the sheriff/process server (service by posting complete as of the date of mailing). Best practice is personal delivery plus first-class mail and documenting the receipt date. (The spec's prior citation to 35-9A-161 was incorrect; 35-9A-161 covers terms and conditions of the rental agreement, not service.) A defective notice or improper service can get an eviction dismissed.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many days is a Alabama unconditional quit notice?
Alabama requires a 7-day unconditional quit notice. Alabama requires a written termination notice even for non-curable conduct; it does NOT provide a 0-day/immediate quit for residential tenancies. Under Ala. Code 35-9A-421(d), certain acts are non-curable and the landlord 'may terminate the rental agreement upon a seven-day notice' with no right to remedy unless the landlord consents: (1) illegal drug activity in the unit/common areas, (2) illegal firearm use/discharge on the premises, (3) criminal assault of a tenant or guest, and (4) a breach involving substantially the same acts as a prior breach the landlord noticed and the tenant cured, IF the second breach occurs within SIX months of the first. Separately, an intentional misrepresentation of a material fact in the lease/application (421(a)) cannot be cured. Note the statute's wording for these 421(d) non-curable defaults is 'seven-day notice' (it does NOT say 'business days,' unlike the curable 421(a)/(b) provisions). Also note: no breach may be cured by a tenant more than TWO times in any 12-month period absent the landlord's express written consent. Set as 7 because that is the operative notice period; the distinguishing feature is the absence of a cure right, not a shorter clock.
What happens after I serve the notice?
If the tenant does not comply by the deadline, you can file an eviction case in Alabama court. Only a court order, enforced by a sheriff or constable, can remove the tenant.
Can I email or download the notice?
Yes — fill in the form above, then download the PDF or email a copy to yourself. Serve it on the tenant using a method Alabama allows.
Disclaimer
This Alabama unconditional quit notice generator is a self-help tool for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Confirm Alabama and local requirements before serving.