EVICTIONS GENERALLY
Q: How long does it take to evict a month-to-month tenant in Florida?
A: "If there's a month-to-month tenant a landlord has the right to evict that tenant. If it's for the failure to pay rent, as soon as the landlord serves that three day notice of failure to pay rent, once those three days are up, the landlord can begin the eviction process in any type of tenancy whether month-to-month or year long tenancy. If the month-to-
month tenancy is over, and the landlord has already notified the tenant that they will not be renewing that month-to-month tenancy, then at the end of that monthly period, the landlord can immediately begin eviction process."
A: "If there's a month-to-month tenant a landlord has the right to evict that tenant. If it's for the failure to pay rent, as soon as the landlord serves that three day notice of failure to pay rent, once those three days are up, the landlord can begin the eviction process in any type of tenancy whether month-to-month or year long tenancy. If the month-to-
month tenancy is over, and the landlord has already notified the tenant that they will not be renewing that month-to-month tenancy, then at the end of that monthly period, the landlord can immediately begin eviction process."