My landlord entered without notice
Michigan tenant rights
What to do when a landlord enters your unit without the notice your state requires — and how to create a paper trail that stops it.
Step 1
Know the notice rule for your state
Most states require 24–48 hours written notice before a landlord can enter for non-emergency reasons (repairs, showings, inspections). Emergencies (flooding, fire, genuine safety issues) are an exception — but "emergency" is narrow, not "whenever I feel like it." Check your lease and state statute for the exact notice window.
Step 2
Document the entry in writing
Send the landlord a dated email or text describing what happened: when they entered, whether you were home, whether they gave notice, and a citation to your state's notice requirement. Keep the reply. Email + text both create the timestamped paper trail you'll need if this escalates.
Step 3
Escalate with a formal written demand
If it happens again, send a certified letter referencing your earlier complaint and stating that further unannounced entries will be treated as a breach of the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. For repeat violations, a tenant-rights attorney can pursue damages in many states.
Step 4
Consider changing the locks (carefully)
Some states let tenants change locks and provide the landlord a key; others require landlord permission. Research your state's rule before acting — an unauthorized lock change can itself be grounds for eviction depending on where you live.
Know the landlord you're renting from
Search Vett for lease-verified reviews and public records on landlords in Michigan before you sign anything.
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