Vermont Eviction Process: Multi-Tiered Notice System
A landlord's guide to the Vermont eviction process, covering 14-day, 30-day, and 60-day notices and the mandatory ejectment action.
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Vermont offers tenants significant notice protections through a multi-tiered system. The required notice period depends entirely on the reason for the eviction, ranging from 14 days to 90 days. All evictions in Vermont must be processed through the Vermont Superior Court via a formal ejectment action.
Self-help evictions are strictly illegal under 9 V.S.A. § 4463, which specifies that a landlord may only take possession of a dwelling unit via court order unless the property has been legally abandoned (see § 4462).
Vermont Residential Eviction Process in vermont
Serve Notice to Quit
Deliver a written notice based on the reason (14 days for non-payment, 30 days for lease violations).
Wait for Notice Period
The tenant has the right to cure the default (pay rent) during the 14-day period to stop the eviction.
File Summons and Complaint
If the tenant remains after the notice expires, file an eviction lawsuit in Superior Court.
Court Hearing
Attend the hearing where a judge will determine if a Writ of Possession should be issued.
Writ of Possession
If granted, the sheriff will serve the writ, giving the tenant a final deadline to move.
Step 1: Determine the Correct Notice Period
Vermont's tiered system requires the landlord to identify the specific legal ground for termination before drafting the notice.
14-Day Notice (Nonpayment)
If the tenant has failed to pay rent, the landlord must serve a written notice giving the tenant 14 days to either pay the outstanding balance in full or vacate the premises.
The Right to Cure: Under 9 V.S.A. § 4467(a) and § 4473, the tenancy does not terminate if the tenant pays or tenders all rent due through the end of the rental period at any time until a judgment of possession is entered. Acceptance of partial payment does not constitute a waiver of the landlord's remedies, so the tenant must pay the full outstanding balance to halt the eviction.
30-Day Notice (Lease Violation)
For substantial breaches of the lease agreement (e.g., unauthorized pets, property damage, illegal activity), the landlord must provide 30 days' written notice to the tenant before filing the ejectment action.
60-Day and 90-Day No-Fault Notices
If the landlord simply wants the tenant to leave (for example, to renovate or move a family member in), they must provide a much longer notice period. Standard rental housing requires 60 days, while mobile home lot tenancies require 90 days.
Step 2: Filing the Ejectment Action
If the tenant fails to comply with the notice (either by failing to pay or failing to vacate), the landlord must file an ejectment action in the Vermont Superior Court, Civil Division.
Vermont does not have a simplified "summary eviction" process. Ejectment actions are formal civil lawsuits. The tenant receives a formal court summons and has approximately 21 days to file an answer or responsive pleading.
Step 3: The Court Hearing and Writ of Possession
At the hearing, the landlord must prove:
- Proper notice was served with the correct statutory timeframe.
- The tenant has failed to cure the breach (e.g., rent remains unpaid) or failed to vacate.
- The eviction is not retaliatory.
If the court rules in the landlord's favor, a Writ of Possession is issued. The local sheriff then executes the writ, physically removing the tenant if necessary.
Illegal Evictions in Vermont (§ 4463)
Vermont takes illegal evictions extremely seriously. A landlord who changes the locks, removes doors, shuts off heat (especially critical during Vermont winters), or removes the tenant's belongings without a court order violates 9 V.S.A. § 4463 and faces:
- Civil liability under § 4464, which includes actual and punitive damages, possession of the premises, and the tenant's attorney's fees.
- Potential statutory penalties for utility shutoffs or other health/safety violations under local codes.
simplified Eviction Workflows
Vermont's multi-tiered notice system (14, 30, 60, or 90 days) means a landlord must select the exactly correct notice type for each specific situation. Serving a 14-day notice when the proper ground requires 30 days will result in the court dismissing the entire ejectment action. Landager automatically identifies the correct statutory notice tier based on the underlying cause, generates the properly formatted notice, and precisely tracks the expiration date through to the court filing deadline.
How Landager Helps
Managing properties in Vermont requires staying on top of strict 14-day deposit returns and 60-day rent increase notices. Landager automates your compliance workflows, tracks every deadline, and generates legal notices that protect your business. Get started with Landager for free today.
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