Alabama Lease Agreements & Broken Leases
Understand Alabama lease agreement requirements, verbal month-to-month rules, and the legal reasons a tenant can break a lease.
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A solid lease agreement is the foundation of any successful landlord-tenant relationship. However, even the strongest contract isn't bulletproof. There are a few specific legal reasons to break a lease in Alabama that landlords must be prepared for.
Drafting a Valid Alabama Lease
Official Law Citation: The rules and regulations outlined on this page are strictly configured under the official Alabama Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (AURLTA). Landlords must always ensure their lease agreements directly adhere to this state code.
Under Alabama's Statute of Frauds, a lease agreement does not have to be written if the term is less than one year. While oral agreements are permitted under AURLTA (§ 35-9A-161), landlords are still mandated to provide written disclosures regarding the identity of owners and managers (§ 35-9A-202). Relying on verbal agreements is legally precarious and makes compliance with these mandatory disclosure requirements difficult to document. All leases should be written and clearly define rent amounts, due dates, and maintenance duties to avoid court disputes.
Your lease cannot contain illegal clauses, such as forcing a tenant to waive their right to sue for negligence, or permitting the landlord to execute self-help evictions.
Valid Reasons for Breaking a Lease
If a tenant moves out before the lease expires without legal justification, they are generally on the hook for the remaining rent. However, Alabama law outlines several valid scenarios where a tenant can break the lease penalty-free:
1. Habitability Violations
If the landlord materially fails to comply with the rental agreement or health and safety standards (§ 35-9A-204), the tenant may deliver a written notice specifying the breach. If the breach is not remedied within 14 days, the lease terminates on a date specified in the notice, which must be at least 14 days after the landlord receives the notice (§ 35-9A-401).
2. Active Military Duty
Under the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA), tenants entering active military service or receiving permanent change of station (PCS) orders can break their lease with 30-days notice.
3. Landlord Harassment
If a landlord repeatedly enters the unit without giving at least two days' notice (except in cases of emergency or impracticality) or uses their right of access to harass the tenant, the tenant may terminate the rental agreement or obtain injunctive relief (§ 35-9A-303, § 35-9A-442).
Handling a Broken Lease in alabama
Tenant Abandons Unit
The tenant moves out early and stops paying rent.
Duty to Mitigate
The landlord must immediately begin advertising the unit to find a new renter.
Assess Damages
Determine the lost rent from the vacancy period.
File Lawsuit
Sue the former tenant in small claims court for the exact amount of rent lost while the unit sat empty.
Staying Updated on Alabama Property Laws
Keeping up with exactly how these rules evolve is vital to protecting your investment. Alabama regulations and local housing ordinances can shift, meaning what is perfectly legal today might require a new lease addendum tomorrow. Always ensure your rental operations align with the most recent local guidelines and statewide precedents to avoid easily preventable compliance fines and prolonged disputes with renters.
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