For a tenancy at will, O.C.G.A. § 44-7-7 requires 60 days' notice from the landlord or 30 days' from the tenant to terminate. Fixed-term leases end on their stated date under their own terms. The unequal notice — longer for the landlord — is a deliberate tenant protection in an otherwise landlord-friendly state.
O.C.G.A. § 44-7-7 provides: 'Sixty days' notice from the landlord or 30 days' notice from the tenant is necessary to terminate a tenancy at will.' A tenancy at will arises when no fixed term is specified (§ 44-7-6), most commonly a month-to-month arrangement. The asymmetry is intentional: a landlord must give twice the notice a tenant must. A fixed-term lease, by contrast, expires at the end of its term, with holdover controlled by the lease. Georgia has no early-termination-fee cap and no general statutory right for an ordinary tenant to break a fixed-term lease early; a tenant who leaves early stays liable for rent under the lease. The federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act separately lets qualifying military tenants terminate early.
No specific statutory penalty. A party who terminates a tenancy at will without giving the § 44-7-7 notice (60 days landlord / 30 days tenant) may remain liable for rent for the unexpired notice period; a tenant who breaks a fixed-term lease early stays liable for rent owed under the lease.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Columbus, GA
Columbus prohibits noisy construction activities in residential and commercial districts between 10 PM and 7 AM. Permitted construction hours for noisy work ...
Columbus, GA
Columbus-Muscogee County enforces decibel-based noise limits under Chapter 14, Article V of the code. Residential areas have a 65 dBA limit during the day (1...
Columbus, GA
Georgia does not require neighbor consent for fences built on your own property. Columbus property owners must ensure fences are on their property and the fi...
Columbus, GA
Columbus requires dogs to be on a leash no longer than 6 feet when off the owner's property and under the immediate physical control of a capable person. Dog...
Columbus, GA
Columbus does not impose breed-specific bans. Georgia's Responsible Dog Ownership Law uses behavior-based dangerous dog classifications that apply to any breed.
Columbus, GA
Columbus restricts wild and exotic animals within city limits. Georgia law requires permits for certain wildlife species. Venomous reptiles, large predators,...
See how Columbus's lease termination & notice to vacate rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.