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Learn when and how renters in Louisiana may lawfully break a lease and how to restrict their obligation for rent until the conclusion of the lease period.

When you signed your lease, you most likely meant to remain for the whole period (usually a year). Despite your best efforts, you may want (or need) to leave before your lease expires, for example, if you’re a Tulane student and only want to remain in your apartment during the academic year. Or maybe you’re relocating with your significant other. You may need to relocate to be closer to your new career or an older parent who need your assistance.

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Breaking the lease is leaving before the end of a fixed-term lease without paying the remaining rent owed under the lease. Here’s a quick rundown of Louisiana tenant rights to end a contract without additional obligation for rent.

Tenant Rights and Responsibilities in Louisiana When Signing a Lease

A lease binds you and your landlord for a certain length of time, generally a year. A landlord cannot raise the rent or amend other provisions of a standard lease until the contract expires (unless the lease itself provides for a change, such as a rent increase mid-lease). A landlord cannot compel you to leave before the lease expires unless you fail to pay the rent or breach another key requirement, such as holding huge and raucous parties on a regular basis. Landlords in Louisiana must follow particular processes to discontinue the tenancy in these instances. Your landlord, for example, may end your renting arrangement with an unconditional leave notice. (Louisiana Civil Procedure Ann. art. 4701).

Tenants are legally obligated to pay rent for the whole lease period, which is normally one year, whether or not they continue to reside in the rented unit—with the exceptions listed below.

When Is It Legal to Break a Lease in Louisiana?

There are few key exceptions to the general rule that a tenant who breaches a lease must pay the whole lease term. In the following circumstances, tenants may be allowed to lawfully leave before the lease term expires.

You have begun active military service.

Under federal law, if you join active military duty after signing a lease, you have the right to break the contract. (The War and National Defense Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C.A. 501 and subsequent.) You must be a member of the “uniformed services,” which include the armed forces, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) commissioned corps, the Public Health Service’s commissioned corps, and the activated National Guard. You must notify your landlord in writing of your intention to end your lease for military reasons. Once the notice is sent or delivered, your tenancy will end 30 days after the next due date for rent, even if that date is many months before your lease ends.

The rental unit is dangerous or violates Louisiana health and safety standards.

When your landlord fails to provide suitable home in accordance with local and state housing rules, a court is likely to rule that you have been “constructively evicted.” This implies that the landlord has effectively “evicted” you by providing unlivable housing, and you are no longer obligated to pay the rent. Louisiana law (La. Civ. Code art. 2694) specifies the measures you must take before moving out due to a severe repair issue. The issue must be really significant, such as a loss of heat or another critical service.

Your landlord is harassing you or infringing on your privacy rights.

The amount of notice required by Louisiana state law for you to enter rental property is not specified (La. Civ. Code art. 2693). If your landlord repeatedly violates your privacy rights, or does things like removing windows or doors, disconnecting utilities, or changing the locks, you will be considered “constructively evicted,” as described above; this will usually justify you breaking the lease without further rent obligation.

In Louisiana, it is the landlord’s responsibility to find a new tenant.

Even if you don’t have a legal reason to break your lease, the good news is that you may not have to pay all of the rent owing for the remainder of the lease period. This is due to Louisiana law (La. Civ. Code art. 2002; Gray v. Kanavel, 508 So.2d 970 (La. Ct. App. 1987)), which requires your landlord to make reasonable attempts to re-let your unit, regardless of your reason for leaving, rather than charging you for the whole remaining rent due under the lease. As a result, if you violate your lease, you may not have to pay much, if any, extra rent. You only have to pay the rent that the landlord loses because you moved out early. This is because Louisiana compels landlords to take reasonable efforts to limit their losses, or “mitigate damages,” as the legal word goes.

So, if you violate your contract and leave without legal explanation, your landlord can’t generally simply sit back and wait until the lease expires, then sue you for the complete amount of missed rent. Your landlord must make reasonable efforts to rerent the property and deduct the let collected from new renters from the amount you owe. The landlord does not need to lower the bar for suitable renters, such as accepting someone with a bad credit history. Furthermore, the landlord is not obligated to rent the unit for less than fair market value, nor is he or she required to devote all of his or her attention to renting your apartment, neglecting other business. Furthermore, the landlord may add appropriate charges to your payment, such as the fees of promoting the property.

While your landlord swiftly rerents the property (which is more probable in college towns and comparable markets), you’ll only be accountable for the (hopefully short) period when the apartment was unoccupied.

The bad news is that if the landlord attempts to rerent your apartment and is unable to locate an appropriate tenant, you will be obligated to pay let for the balance of your lease term. If you leave many months before your lease expires, this might be a significant sum of money. Your landlord will almost certainly utilize your security deposit to pay the amount you owe initially. If your deposit is insufficient, your landlord may sue you, most likely in small claims court, where the maximum in Louisiana municipal court is $5,000 and $5,000 in Justice of the Peace court.

How to Reduce Your Financial Liability When Breaking a Lease

If you want to leave early and don’t have a legal reason, there are better choices than just packing out and praying your landlord finds a new renter swiftly. There are many things you can do to reduce the amount of money you have to pay your landlord—and to assist assure a positive recommendation from the landlord when you’re searching for your next place to live.

You may greatly improve the situation by giving your landlord as much notice as possible and drafting a heartfelt letter explaining why you need to leave early. Ideally, you should be able to provide your landlord a suitable replacement renter, someone with strong credit and solid references, to sign a new lease.

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