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πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Just Cause Eviction

Just Cause Eviction: Jupiter vs West Palm Beach

How do just cause eviction rules compare between Jupiter, FL and West Palm Beach, FL?

Jupiter has fewer restrictions than West Palm Beach.

Jupiter, FL

Palm Beach County

Few Restrictions

Jupiter follows Florida state landlord-tenant law under FL Ch. 83, Part II. No local just-cause eviction requirement. Landlords may terminate month-to-month tenancies with 30 days written notice (increased from 15 days by 2023 SB 1586).

View full Jupiter rules β†’

West Palm Beach, FL

Palm Beach County

Some Restrictions

West Palm Beach adopted a Tenant Bill of Rights requiring 60 days written notice for rent increases over 5% and notice for non-renewals on month-to-month tenancies, supplementing FL Β§83 landlord-tenant law.

View full West Palm Beach rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactJupiterWest Palm Beach
Local RuleNone - state law governsTenant Bill of Rights Ch. 23
State LawFL Ch. 83 Part IIFL Β§83 controls evictions
MTM Notice30 days (FL Β§83.57)-
Non-Pay Notice3 days (FL Β§83.56)-
CourtPalm Beach County-
Notice-60 days for 5%+ rent increases
Just Cause-Not required (state preempts)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Jupiter FAQ

Does Jupiter require a reason to evict?

No. Florida state law allows termination of month-to-month tenancies with 30 days notice without cause. Fixed-term leases require cause or expiration.

Who enforces this in Jupiter?

Jupiter code enforcement at (561) 746-5134 handles complaints.

West Palm Beach FAQ

Does West Palm Beach have just-cause eviction?

No. Florida law allows no-cause non-renewal. The city only requires 60 days advance notice for non-renewals and large rent increases.

Who enforces this in West Palm Beach?

West Palm Beach code enforcement at (561) 822-1300 handles complaints.

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