Early Lease Termination Letter

Use our early termination of lease agreement to politely request that your landlord allow you to break a lease agreement early.

Early Lease Termination Letter

Updated July 11, 2024
Written by Sara Hostelley | Reviewed by Susan Chai, Esq.

An early lease termination letter is a document a tenant sends to a landlord to formally request an early termination of a lease agreement. While landlords are not legally required to terminate a lease early, a letter may convince them to do so.

Sending an early lease termination letter is a polite and intelligent way to begin discussing your situation with your landlord.

When to Use

Here are some scenarios to use an early lease termination letter:

Please remember to issue proper notice as dictated by local laws and your original lease.

How to Break Your Lease Early

Unless you have unique circumstances for moving out early, like active military duty or the landlord’s failure to keep the premises livable, you may have to pay rent for the rest of the lease.

However, you may be able to break your lease agreement early by following these steps:

Step 1 – Read Your Lease

Review your original lease to see if it covers protocols for terminating your lease agreement early. For example, you may have to provide a certain amount of days’ advance notice to your landlord before breaking the rental term. Abide by all instructions and requirements to make your request easier to accept.

Step 2 – Write and Send a Letter to Your Landlord

Compose an early lease termination letter explaining why you must end the lease prematurely. For example, you may need to break the lease because you lost your job, got divorced, or need to care for a sick family member.

Landlords don’t have to comply with an early termination request originating from personal reasons, but they may sympathize with your need to break the lease if you explain it in your letter.

Send the letter to your landlord as soon as possible to give them ample written notice. You can hand-deliver it or send it via certified mail.

Step 3 – Keep All Documentation

Please make a copy of your early lease termination letter and note when your landlord received it. Keep it in your records to show that you provided adequate notice to vacate the rental property early.

Step 4 – Negotiate the Terms of Ending the Lease Early

Prepare to negotiate the terms of ending the lease early. Early termination may not come without penalties, but you can negotiate the following items:

Step 5 – Ask to Sublet the Property

If your landlord refuses to let you terminate the lease early, ask if you can sublet the property. By subletting, you can move out and continue collecting rent from a subtenant. You can use their rent payments to pay your landlord. Subletting relieves the landlord of finding a replacement tenant, making the request more agreeable.

If the current lease agreement forbids subletting, you can ask the landlord to use a lease amendment to modify the agreement.

As the current tenant, you would use a sublease agreement to rent the property to a subtenant.

Step 6 – Get Help from a Lawyer

Some provisions in state laws allow tenants to break lease agreements early, such as if they suffer domestic abuse (for example, review Cal. Civ. Code § 1946.7 if you rent property in California).

Review your state’s laws and contact a lawyer for assistance in locating these loopholes.

What to Include in an Early Termination of Lease Letter

Lease termination letters should include all of the following elements: