Idaho has no statute governing landlord entry into a residential rental. State law sets no required notice period or permitted hours, so access is controlled entirely by the lease. In practice landlords give 'reasonable' notice (often 24 hours) for non-emergencies, but no statutory rule mandates it.
Unlike many states, Idaho's landlord-tenant law contains no provision requiring a landlord to give advance notice before entering to inspect, make repairs, show the unit, or supply services, and none specifying permissible hours of entry. Because there is no statutory standard, the lease agreement governs; if the lease is silent, courts and practitioners apply a general 'reasonable notice' expectation, commonly treated as 24 hours, with no notice needed in a genuine emergency. Tenants seeking notice protection should negotiate an entry clause into the written lease, since the code itself imposes no requirement. There is no statutory remedy aimed specifically at improper entry.
No specific statutory penalty. Because Idaho has no entry statute, a tenant's recourse for abusive entry generally lies in the lease terms or common-law claims (such as trespass or breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment) rather than a dedicated statutory remedy.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Boise, ID
Boise's zoning and property maintenance codes do not restrict residential lawn ornaments, statuary, or religious displays at single-family homes. Political s...
Boise, ID
Boise has no specific city ordinance regulating residential inflatable holiday displays. Restrictions come from HOA and condo covenants under Idaho Code Titl...
Boise, ID
Boise has no citywide ordinance restricting residential holiday lights at single-family homes. Real restrictions arise from HOA and condo covenants under Ida...
Boise, ID
Outdoor kitchens in Boise require separate trade permits from Planning and Development Services: building permit for structural elements, mechanical permit f...
Boise, ID
Boise has no specific city ordinance regulating residential offset smokers, pellet grills, or wood-fired pizza ovens at single-family homes in normal conditi...
Boise, ID
Boise adopts the International Fire Code (IFC) with local amendments through Boise City Code Title 9. IFC §308.1.4 prohibits open-flame cooking devices and L...
See how Boise's landlord entry & notice rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.