North Carolina · Moving out

North Carolina notice to vacate — the 7 days rule and a free letter

North Carolina gives month-to-month tenants the shortest runway in the country: a notice to quit of just seven days (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14). The catch is the anchor — the statute counts those days before the end of the current rental period, not from whenever you decide to leave. Rent due on the 1st means the period ends on the month’s last day, so your letter must be in the landlord’s hands at least seven days before that. Miss it and the tenancy rolls one more month. The same section sets one month for year-to-year tenancies, two days for week-to-week, and a big exception: 60 days for a rented manufactured-home lot, regardless of term. Leases routinely demand more than the statute — 30 or 60 days is common in Charlotte and Raleigh — and the longer lease term controls. Deposits follow the Tenant Security Deposit Act: itemization and refund within 30 days, or an interim accounting at 30 days and a final one within 60 when damage costs take longer to pin down (§ 42-52).

7 daystenant month-to-month notice · N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14

Not legal advice — general information for North Carolina. Last reviewed: July 2026.

Notice-period check

Your date clears the state minimum

August 7, 2026 gives 35 days' notice — at or above North Carolina's 7 days minimum for month-to-month tenants (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14). If your lease requires more, the lease controls.

Most statutes count notice to the end of a rental period — if rent is due on the 1st, plan to move out on the last day of a month.

[Tenant name(s)]

[Rental address]

July 3, 2026

[Landlord / property manager name]

Landlord / Property Manager

RE: Notice of intent to vacate — [Rental address]

Dear [Landlord / property manager name],

Please accept this letter as my written notice of intent to vacate the rental unit at [Rental address]. My tenancy will end and I will deliver possession of the premises no later than August 7, 2026. This provides at least 7 days of written notice, as required for month-to-month tenancies in North Carolina (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14).

I will remove all personal belongings, return all keys and access devices, and leave the unit in clean condition, normal wear and tear excepted. Please contact me to schedule a move-out inspection.

I will provide a forwarding address for the return of my security deposit before my move-out date.

This notice is delivered via certified mail with return receipt requested on July 3, 2026.

Sincerely,

[Tenant name(s)]

North Carolina notice rules

  • Seven days is the floor, but it must land before the end of the current rental period — rent due the 1st means notice at least seven days before the month’s last day.
  • A notice that arrives with fewer than seven days left in the period does not end that period; it takes effect at the end of the following one, and that month’s rent is owed.
  • Check your lease first: written leases in North Carolina commonly require 30 or 60 days, and courts enforce the longer contractual term over the 7-day statute.
  • Renting a lot for a manufactured home? The notice is 60 days before the period’s end regardless of tenancy length (§ 42-14).
  • No delivery method is prescribed for this notice — with a window this tight, hand delivery with a dated copy beats mail; certified mail can eat most of your seven days in transit.
  • Deposit: itemized statement and refund within 30 days of tenancy ending and possession returning; if damages can’t be priced that fast, an interim accounting is due at 30 days and the final one within 60 (§ 42-52). Nothing may be withheld for normal wear and tear.

For landlords

For month-to-month tenancies § 42-14 runs in both directions — a landlord can also end the arrangement on seven days tied to the period’s end. Manufactured-home lots are the exception at 60 days no matter who terminates. North Carolina has no rent control, and cities and counties are barred from enacting it (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14.1).

Worked example with real dates

Rent of $1,500 due on the 1st in Charlotte, and you want out on August 31, 2026. Seven days before the period ends means your notice must reach the landlord by August 24. Hand-delivered August 20, you are safely inside the window. Dropped in the mail August 27, it arrives too late to end the August period — the tenancy runs through September 30 and September’s $1,500 is owed. North Carolina’s margin is generous on paper and unforgiving in transit.

North Carolina notice to vacate FAQ

Is 7 days’ notice really legal to move out in North Carolina?

Yes — N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-14 sets seven days for month-to-month tenancies, the shortest tenant notice statute in the country. Two caveats: the seven days must fall before the end of the current rental period, and a written lease requiring 30 or 60 days overrides the statute. Most disputes come from tenants who counted seven days from delivery instead of backward from the period’s end.

Does the 7-day rule apply to my landlord too?

For a month-to-month tenancy, yes — § 42-14 speaks of the notice to quit generally, so either side can terminate on seven days tied to the period’s end. Year-to-year tenancies need one month, week-to-week just two days. Remember this is termination notice, not eviction: removing a tenant still requires a summary ejectment case through the courts.

When do I get my security deposit back in North Carolina?

Within 30 days of the tenancy ending and possession going back to the landlord (§ 42-52). If the damage bill genuinely can’t be totaled that fast, the landlord owes you an interim accounting at 30 days and a final one within 60. Deductions can’t touch normal wear and tear, and the deposit itself was capped going in — one and a half months’ rent for a month-to-month tenancy (§ 42-51).

I rent a lot for my mobile home in North Carolina — is my notice still 7 days?

No. Section 42-14 carves out rented spaces for manufactured homes (as defined in G.S. 143-143.9(6)): notice to quit must be given at least 60 days before the end of the current rental period, regardless of the tenancy’s term. The longer window exists because relocating a manufactured home is nothing like packing an apartment.

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