Check your state laws. In Illinois the landlord must give a 48 hours notice, then the landlord can enter whether you are there are not.
2006-11-06 06:51:49
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answer #1
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answered by Midwest guy 4
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13. TENANT'S RIGHT TO PRIVACY
Generally, a landlord may only enter a tenant’s unit for a “reasonable business purpose,” after making an effort to give the tenant reasonable notice. (54) If a landlord violates this law the tenant can take the landlord to court to break the lease, recover the damage deposit, and receive a civil penalty of up to $100 per violation. (55)
Examples of a reasonable business purpose include:
Showing the unit to prospective tenants. (56)
Showing the unit to a prospective buyer or insurance agent. (57)
Performing maintenance work. (58)
Showing the unit to state or local officials (i.e., fire, housing, health or building inspectors) inspecting the property. (59)
Checking on a tenant causing a disturbance within the unit. (60)
Checking on a tenant the landlord believes is violating the lease. (61)
Checking to see if a person is staying in the unit who has not signed the lease. (62)
Checking the unit when a tenant moves out. (63)
Performing housekeeping work in a senior housing unit. A senior housing unit is a building where 80 percent of the tenants are age 55 or older. (64)
A tenant’s right to prior notice may not be waived in any residential lease. (65) However, the landlord may enter the unit without giving prior notice in the following situations:
When immediate entry is necessary to prevent injury to property or people due to concerns over maintenance, building security or law enforcement. (66)
When immediate entry is necessary to determine a tenant’s safety. (67)
When immediate entry is necessary to comply with state law or local ordinance. (68)
If a landlord enters without giving prior notice and the tenant is not present, the landlord must give written notice to the tenant. (69) If the landlord violates this law, the tenant may recover up to $100 per violation in court. (70)
2006-11-06 06:52:29
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answer #2
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answered by parsonsel 6
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Renters have many rights in many cases allowing the landlord to enter or Not is one of the biggest. Depending on how the contract reads and if your up to date with your rent the landlord may have the right to enter the apartment without notifying you. Check how the rental contract reads then ask why the landlord needs to get in all these times...
2006-11-06 06:53:30
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answer #3
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answered by Scott 6
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nope.Well defo in Scotland not 2 sure bout anywhere else but they have to give 2 days notice unless there is a major problem and they cant get a hold of u.My ex landlord came into my flat and i knew sher had been there coz she left a letter on my table but she also had a good look through my things.i ended my lease and moved out no-one is allowed to invade ur privacy!!!Think what he or she could be doing???its not right make a point of visiting ur local citizens advice and ask what your rights are i visited and was told they can be charged for entering your premises without permission!!!!!!!!!!!sooooooooo wrong!!!Tell him/her not to come back in and tell them u hav sought legal advice!!!!
2006-11-06 06:54:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No, by law he must give you 24 hr notice with a reason. Unless it is an emergency. Then he can come in immediately. However he must let you know he entered and what the emergency was and if it was repaired or when it will be repaired.
2006-11-06 06:54:07
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answer #5
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answered by kimmamarie 5
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First, he has to have a reason, and he needs to give you that in writing.
Second, most states require 24 hour NOTICE. That's notice, not permission.
2006-11-06 08:56:12
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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No. It's called "trespassing". Even without a written lease, you have the right to exclusive possession of the property.
2006-11-06 06:51:54
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answer #7
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answered by open4one 7
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No he can not, unless he has good cause, like a broken water pipe, gas leak, etc. otherwise he needs to provide you a 24-48 hr. notice. If you can find another place I would move, I like my privacy...
2006-11-06 06:59:25
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answer #8
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answered by Jamaison D 3
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No it is not.
You have to be advise before your lanlord decides to enter your appartment. If it continues, you can call the building owners or file a formal complaint.
What he is doing is invading your privacy. It is unacceptable.
2006-11-06 06:57:27
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answer #9
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answered by Jojo 4
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Sorry In Illinois and maximum different state I relatively have been in, the owner owns your place and is entitled to stroll in if there is reason, in the time of reasonable hours. examine your hire. via going to the police without speaking to him, you have placed your self in a foul mild. you will possibly to boot flow now., Sorry, upkeep is basically no longer achieved, and calls no longer back. you probably did no longer point out why he/she entered. I notify tenants that i visit go into if i've got faith there is choose. yet many cases I relatively have not been in a position from one renting era to the subsequent time I initiate exhibiting for a sparkling tenant. it relatively is not trespass. he's no longer breaking the regulation. as quickly as back, you do no longer very own THE UNIT> he does. yet he won't be able to are available in at 10 pm at night for the heck of it. that should make it powerful eviction. I had one guy and sister that went to an handle I owned, ans called from thecontinual way, had to make certain it good now,. I confirmed it to them after calling the tenants, 2 days later they had to lease the residing house yet demanded seventy two hour observe upon get right of entry to. I refused to lease to them. They stubborn me like a canines,,, bypass determine. via ways I continually continually attempt to call forward, and with cellular telephones changing each and every of the time, now and back don't have cutting-edge quantity. yet I do my maximum suitable. Edit>> this is his place, and you at the instant are not allowed to alter locks except he enables it, i wouldn't in any respect enable a tenant exchange locks, as all mine are grasp keyed. base line, in case you do no longer have faith your LL do no longer lease the situation, He does have a key. Having seen the clarification for get right of entry to I understand the priority, and SNARK under me has a outstanding submit.. If basically we've been waiting to supply observe, I as quickly as had one roommate enable me interior the unit, and the different roommate replaced into mad as hell because of the fact i did no longer call her. ?? bypass determine. humorous situation is the 1st roommate called because of the fact the substantial broke interior the deadbolt.
2016-10-15 11:00:23
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answer #10
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answered by arshad 4
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