You can start an eviction (unlawful detainer) case if your tenant didn’t do what you asked for in the Notice and the deadline in the Notice has passed. Your next step is to fill out forms to ask the judge to order your tenant to move out (and pay you if they owe past due rent).
PRINT EMAILYou can only file an eviction case if the Notice deadline passed. Each Notice has a different deadline
How do I calculate the deadline?To calculate the Notice deadline, start with the number of days in the Notice's name. Day 1 is the day after the Notice was delivered to the tenant if handed to them or the day after it was mailed to them if your tenant wasn't handed the Notice in person.
If this Notice was delivered on a Thursday, then Day 1 is Friday, Day 2 is Monday (if not a court holiday), Day 3 is Tuesday (if not a court holiday). So if the tenant doesn't do what you asked for in the Notice or move out, you can start a court case on Day 4, Wednesday.
EXAMPLE: 30-day Notice of Termination of TenancyIf this Notice was delivered on a Thursday, then Day 1 is Friday, Day 2 is Saturday, Day 3 is Sunday, Day 4 is Monday, Day 5 is Tuesday and you keep counting on the calendar until you get to Day 30. If the tenant doesn't move out, you can start a court case on Day 31.
Evictions are very detail-oriented. You can lose your case even if you only make a small mistake, like counting days wrong or asking for too much past due rent by accident. If you lose, you have to start the whole case over.