Got an eviction notice?
Paste it below, or upload a photo. You will see, in plain language, what the notice is, your deadline, where you stand, and your options. A notice is not an eviction, and only a court can order you out. It will not give legal advice. For that, free local legal aid can help.
Your notice never leaves this page. Whether you paste the text or read a photo, it stays on your device, with no server and no account. Pasted text even works with your internet off.
Before you trust a word of this
A notice is not an eviction. Receiving a notice does not mean you have to leave. In almost every state, a landlord cannot lock you out, shut off utilities, or remove your things. Only a court can order an eviction, and only a sheriff can carry it out.
The summons deadline is the one that bites. If you are sued, you usually have only days to file an answer. Miss it and you can lose automatically. Read the exact date off your papers.
The law is local. Landlord-tenant rules and deadlines vary a lot by state and city. This explains the common shape of things; your local law and your own paper control the specifics.
Free help exists, and tenants with help do far better. Find free local legal aid at LawHelp.org, or call 211 for legal aid and rental assistance near you.