Just cause eviction rules in Auburn, WA β sometimes called tenant protection or "for cause" eviction ordinances β list the specific legal reasons a landlord can end a tenancy.
Washington RCW 59.18.650 requires just cause to terminate most residential tenancies. Auburn landlords must identify one of the 16 statutory grounds and use the state-prescribed notice form before filing eviction.
Auburn follows the statewide Washington just-cause eviction law, RCW 59.18.650, which took effect in 2021 and applies to most month-to-month and fixed-term residential tenancies in Auburn. Under this law, a landlord may not end a tenancy, refuse to renew, or issue a notice to vacate unless the landlord has one of 16 enumerated just causes such as nonpayment of rent, material lease breach, substantial repairs, owner or family move-in, sale of a single-family rental, or certain criminal activity on the premises. Each cause has a specific notice period and notice form prescribed by the Washington Attorney General. A 14-day pay-or-vacate notice is required for nonpayment of rent, a 10-day notice for lease breaches, and a 90-day notice for most no-fault reasons including owner move-in or sale. Auburn does not have its own stricter municipal eviction protections, so state law governs. Unlawful detainer cases for Auburn properties split between King County District Court (north of the King-Pierce line) and Pierce County District Court (south of the line) depending on where the rental unit sits. Tenants facing eviction can access free legal help through the statewide Eviction Defense Screening Line and local providers. Landlords who attempt self-help eviction by changing locks or shutting off utilities are liable for damages up to three months rent plus attorney fees under RCW 59.18.290. Contact Auburn Code Enforcement at 253-931-3000 for residential habitability complaints.
Evictions filed without just cause or without the required AG notice form can be dismissed and the landlord may owe the tenant damages, court costs, and attorney fees. Illegal lockouts can result in three months rent plus damages under RCW 59.18.290.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how other cities in King County handle just cause eviction.
See how Auburn's just cause eviction rules stack up against other locations.
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