Your landlord has a key to your space. A landlord entry clause determines when they can use it, what notice they must give, and what they can do once they're inside. Without clear entry provisions, some landlords treat tenant space as their property to access at will — because without a specific clause, they sometimes can.
State Law Sets Minimum Entry Notice in Residential Leases
For residential tenants, most states require landlords to provide advance notice before entering — typically 24 hours (the most common standard) to 48 hours (Arizona, for example). The notice must specify the reason for entry: inspection, repairs, showing to prospective tenants. Emergency entry — for situations posing immediate risk to property or safety — is generally permitted without notice, but the emergency must be genuine. A landlord who claims 'emergency' to enter without notice whenever convenient is likely violating your state's entry laws. If your landlord enters without proper notice, document it and send a written objection — repeated violations can support a constructive eviction or harassment claim.
Commercial Leases Have No Statutory Entry Notice — The Lease Is Everything
State landlord-tenant entry notice laws generally apply only to residential leases. Commercial tenants have no statutory notice protection — the entry rights in the lease are the only rights you have. Standard commercial leases often include very broad entry rights: 'Landlord may enter the Premises at any time for any purpose with or without notice' is common boilerplate. Without modification, this language means your landlord can enter your business premises unannounced at any time, potentially exposing your confidential business operations, client information, and proprietary processes. Negotiate specific notice requirements, business hours limitations, and a confidentiality obligation for anything the landlord observes.
Entry for Showing Purposes Requires Balance Between Landlord and Tenant Interests
The most common entry dispute involves showing the space to prospective tenants during the final months of a lease. Landlords need this access to maintain leasing continuity; tenants need to maintain productive business operations during their remaining lease period. A balance: landlord has the right to show the space upon 48 hours written notice during business hours, with showings limited to 2 per week unless the tenant consents to more. This protects the landlord's leasing interest while preventing the tenant from being disrupted by daily showings during their final months. Add a requirement that the tenant or tenant's representative may be present for all showings — a legitimate request to protect confidential information.
Confidentiality Obligations Should Cover What Landlords Observe During Entry
Commercial landlords who enter your business premises during operations may observe confidential business information: client names and data, proprietary processes, unreleased products, or financial operations. Most commercial leases have no confidentiality provision covering the landlord's observations during entry. Negotiate a mutual confidentiality obligation: 'Landlord and Landlord's agents shall maintain strict confidentiality regarding any business information, client information, or proprietary processes observed during any entry to the Premises, and shall not disclose any such information to any third party.' This is especially important for businesses in regulated industries (healthcare, finance, law) or companies with trade secrets or competitive intelligence concerns.
Emergency Entry Exceptions Must Be Defined, Not Open-Ended
Emergency entry provisions — allowing entry without notice in true emergencies — are legitimate and necessary. But 'emergency' needs to be defined. A burst pipe that's flooding an adjacent unit is an emergency. A landlord's concern that your HVAC may be set too low is not. Red-flag emergency language: 'Landlord may enter without notice whenever Landlord believes any condition may damage the Premises.' This is so broad it effectively eliminates the notice requirement entirely — any concern about the property becomes an emergency. Better language: 'In the event of an emergency posing immediate risk of physical harm to persons or significant property damage, Landlord may enter without prior notice but shall notify Tenant immediately upon or before entry.' The immediate notification requirement limits abuse of the emergency exception.
Key Takeaways
- Residential landlords must give 24–48 hours notice in most states; commercial landlords have no statutory requirement
- Negotiate 48-hour written notice, business hours only, and a limited list of permitted purposes into any commercial lease
- Add a confidentiality provision covering what landlords and their agents observe during entry
- Define emergency entry specifically — don't leave 'emergency' undefined in the lease
- For lease-end showings, limit frequency, require notice, and preserve your right to have a representative present
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can my landlord enter while I'm not home?
- If the landlord has provided proper notice and you haven't objected or requested a reschedule, yes. Most states allow entry for stated purposes even if you're not present, as long as proper notice was given. Maintaining a record of all entries is advisable.
- What if my landlord has entered multiple times without notice?
- Document each instance with date, time, and what you found. Send a formal written notice citing your state's entry notice law. If violations continue, consult a tenant's rights attorney. In some states, persistent unauthorized entry is grounds for lease termination and/or claims for damages.
- Can I change my locks without my landlord's permission?
- Most leases require landlord consent to change locks. Some states allow tenants to change locks unilaterally in certain circumstances (like after domestic violence). If you change locks without permission in other circumstances, you may be in breach of your lease.
- Do different rules apply when a landlord shows the unit?
- The same notice requirements apply when showing the unit to prospective tenants or buyers. Most states allow showings with 24-hour notice during reasonable hours. Some states require consent for buyers' showings, particularly if an active sale process would unduly disrupt the tenant.
- What is a 'quiet enjoyment' clause?
- The covenant of quiet enjoyment is an implied (and often express) guarantee that the tenant's peaceful possession of the property will not be substantially interfered with by the landlord. Repeated unauthorized entries can constitute a breach of quiet enjoyment.