Skip to contentPostalForm

State guide

Louisiana notice to vacate: notice periods and mailing rules

How much notice Louisiana requires to end a tenancy or demand overdue rent, what the statute says about serving notice, and a template you can mail with proof.

Published Jul 2, 2026

How it works

Step 1

Upload your PDF

Drag and drop your document or upload from phone.

Step 2

Add addresses

Enter sender and recipient addresses with validation.

Step 3

Checkout

We print and mail it via USPS with your chosen options.

How much notice is required in Louisiana?

For a month-to-month tenancy, for month-to-month leases, either party must give written notice 10 calendar days before the end of the current rental month (La. Civ. Code art. 2728); that termination notice doubles as the notice to vacate under La. CCP art. 4701 for leases with no definite term. (La. Code Civ. Proc. art. 4701, La. Civ. Code art. 2728)

If your lease requires more notice than the statute, the lease controls. Count days from the date notice is properly served, not the date you write it. Statutes change — verify the current text before serving, and treat this as a starting point, not a substitute for the statute.

Nonpayment of rent notice in Louisiana

Louisiana has no statutory pay-or-quit cure period; once the right of occupancy ceases, the landlord must deliver a written notice to vacate allowing not less than 5 days before filing eviction (La. CCP art. 4701) — and the 5-day notice may be waived by a written lease clause.

Nonpayment notices are the strictest documents in landlord-tenant law: the wording, the cure period, and the service method often come straight from the statute, and a defective notice restarts the whole clock. Where your state publishes required form language, use it verbatim.

Serving notice by mail in Louisiana

The statute's service rules for Louisiana were not independently verified for this page — check the citations below and your lease's notice clause before relying on any single method.

Whichever methods your statute allows, Certified Mail gives you a dated USPS record and delivery confirmation — the fact an eviction case usually turns on.

Local rules and exceptions

Louisiana has no statewide rent control or just-cause eviction statute as of this page's last update. Cities and counties can still add their own notice rules — check local ordinances for the property's jurisdiction before serving.

Louisiana notice to vacate template (copy and edit)

This sample notice works for a Louisiana tenancy once you confirm the notice period above and any wording your statute or lease requires. Replace the bracketed fields, count the days carefully, and keep a copy of everything.

[Date]

[Tenant Name(s)]
[Property Address, Unit]
[City, LA ZIP]

Re: Notice to vacate — [Property Address, Unit]

Dear [Tenant Name(s)],

This letter is your written notice that your tenancy at [Property Address, Unit] will end on [Termination Date], in accordance with your rental agreement and Louisiana law. Please vacate and return all keys by that date.

[If month-to-month: This notice is given at least [Notice Period] days before the termination date, as required for a month-to-month tenancy in Louisiana.]

Please leave the unit in the condition required by your lease, and provide a forwarding address for the return of your security deposit and any required documentation.

If you have questions about this notice, contact me at [Phone / Email].

This notice is delivered by [first-class / certified] mail.

Sincerely,

[Landlord / Property Manager Name]
[Signature]
[Company, if any]
[Mailing Address]
[Phone / Email]

Fill it in, sign it, and PostalForm prints and mails it — you see the exact PDF and the exact price before anything sends, and Certified Mail adds a dated USPS delivery record.

Sources

Statutes change. Verify the current text of the statute and any local ordinance before serving a notice, and talk to a Louisiana landlord-tenant attorney when the stakes are high. This page is general information, not legal advice.

What you get

  • • Fill in the notice and preview the exact PDF before paying
  • • Certified Mail option with electronic return receipt
  • • Address validation before carrier handoff
  • • No printer, stamps, or post office trip

Simple pricing

Base fee plus per-page printing. Postage included. See pricing for details.

Why PostalForm

USPS delivery

First Class or Express with optional Certified Mail.

Address validation

Reduce returned mail and delivery errors.

Fast checkout

Upload once and mail in minutes.

FAQs

How much notice does a landlord have to give in Louisiana?
for month-to-month leases, either party must give written notice 10 calendar days before the end of the current rental month (La. Civ. Code art. 2728); that termination notice doubles as the notice to vacate under La. CCP art. 4701 for leases with no definite term. (La. Code Civ. Proc. art. 4701, La. Civ. Code art. 2728) If the lease requires more notice, the lease controls. Verify the current statute before serving.
How many days does a tenant get to pay overdue rent in Louisiana?
Louisiana has no statutory pay-or-quit cure period; once the right of occupancy ceases, the landlord must deliver a written notice to vacate allowing not less than 5 days before filing eviction (La. CCP art. 4701) — and the 5-day notice may be waived by a written lease clause. Check the statute cited on this page for the exact wording and service requirements.
Can I serve a Louisiana notice by certified mail?
Confirm the service methods Louisiana law allows before relying on mail alone — the citations on this page are the place to start. When mail is permitted, Certified Mail creates the dated record, and some statutes add days for mailed service.
Is this legal advice?
No. This page summarizes Louisiana notice rules with citations so you can verify them, but statutes change and local ordinances can add requirements. For an eviction or any contested situation, have a Louisiana landlord-tenant attorney review your notice before you serve it.
What happens if I give less notice than Louisiana requires?
A defective notice is the most common way landlords lose time: a court can treat a short or improperly served notice as void, which means starting the clock over. Count days from when notice is properly served, add any days your state requires for mailed service, and keep dated proof of mailing.

Ready to send it?

Upload the signed notice as a PDF, preview every page, and see the exact price before you pay. Certified Mail adds a dated delivery record.

Resources