How Do Eviction Laws Differ by State or Locality, and When Can Landlords Evict for "Just Cause"?

By FightLandlords
How Do Eviction Laws Differ by State or Locality, and When Can Landlords Evict for "Just Cause"?

Whether your landlord needs a specific legal reason to evict you or can simply decide not to renew your lease depends entirely on where you live—and for New York tenants, that landscape just changed dramatically. Understanding if "just cause" protections apply to your apartment is what separates tenants who can be removed without reason from those whose landlords must prove legitimate grounds in court.

The difference isn't academic—it's the difference between stable housing and arbitrary displacement at your landlord's whim.

The National Divide: Just Cause vs. No-Cause Eviction

Across the United States, eviction laws fall into two fundamentally different approaches that create vastly different tenant protections.

Just cause jurisdictions:

No-cause jurisdictions:

Why this matters profoundly:

In no-cause states, landlords can evict you because:

In just cause jurisdictions, landlords must prove:

The growing just cause movement:

Recent years have seen expansion of just cause protections:

New York's 2024 Good Cause Eviction Law represents this national trend, bringing just cause protections to market-rate tenants in covered areas for the first time.

How State and Local Laws Create Different Rules

Understanding your eviction protections requires knowing which level of law applies to your specific situation.

State-Level Just Cause Laws

States with statewide just cause:

California:

Oregon:

New Jersey:

Washington:

New Hampshire:

Local Just Cause Ordinances

Major cities with just cause laws:

San Francisco, CA:

Oakland, CA:

Los Angeles, CA:

Seattle, WA:

Portland, OR:

Washington, DC:

The Patchwork Problem

Why geography matters so much:

Two identical apartments, identical leases, identical situations—but in different cities, completely different tenant rights.

Apartment A (no-cause jurisdiction):

Apartment B (just cause jurisdiction):

The location determines everything.

Common "Just Cause" Grounds Across Jurisdictions

While specific language varies by state and city, just cause laws typically include similar categories of permissible eviction grounds.

Tenant-Fault Grounds

These blame tenant conduct for eviction:

Nonpayment of rent:

Substantial or repeated lease violations:

Nuisance or interference with other tenants:

Property damage:

Illegal activity:

Refusal of access:

No-Fault Just Cause Grounds

These don't blame tenant but provide landlord with legitimate reasons:

Owner or family move-in:

Demolition or substantial rehabilitation:

Permanent withdrawal from rental market:

Sale of property:

Substantial rehabilitation required by government:

New York's Baseline Eviction Framework

Before understanding New York's new Good Cause Law, you need to know the foundation it builds on.

RPAPL § 711: Summary Proceeding Grounds

New York's general eviction statute lists specific grounds:

Nonpayment of rent:

Holdover after lease expiration:

Holding over after sale:

Illegal or immoral use:

Objectionable tenant conduct:

Non-primary residence (regulated units):

Other specific grounds:

What this meant before Good Cause:

For market-rate tenants, landlords could:

For rent-regulated tenants:

Good Cause Law changed the game for market-rate tenants in covered areas.

New York's Good Cause Eviction Law: The Game Changer

Effective April 20, 2024, New York's Good Cause Eviction Law (Real Property Law Article 6-A) brought just cause protections to market-rate tenants in covered localities.

Where Good Cause Applies

Covered localities:

Geographic scope matters: If you're outside covered areas, Good Cause doesn't apply. Your landlord doesn't need just cause to refuse renewal of market-rate lease.

What Properties and Tenants Are Covered

Good Cause applies to most market-rate rentals but has significant exemptions:

Exempt properties:

High-rent exemption:

High-income exemption:

Landlord must prove exemption: If landlord claims exemption in non-renewal notice, they must prove it. Otherwise, Good Cause presumptively applies.

The "Just Cause" Grounds Under Good Cause Law

For covered NYC market-rate tenants, landlords can only evict or refuse renewal for these reasons:

1. Nonpayment of rent (RPL § 216(1)(a))

What this means: Landlord can't manufacture nonpayment ground by imposing excessive rent increase then claiming nonpayment when you can't afford it.

2. Material lease violation (RPL § 216(1)(b))

What this means: Minor infractions don't count. Landlord must give you chance to fix issue. Violation must be serious enough to justify eviction.

3. Nuisance, illegal use, or damage (RPL § 216(1)(c))

What this means: Your conduct must seriously harm property or other tenants. Occasional noise complaints or minor issues insufficient.

4. Refusal of access (RPL § 216(1)(d))

5. Owner or family occupancy (RPL § 216(1)(g))

What this means: If your landlord has empty apartments, they can't use this ground. If you're 65 or older or have disability, this ground doesn't apply to you at all.

6. Demolition (RPL § 216(1)(h))

What this means: Landlord must prove actual demolition plans with documentation, not just claim they might demolish someday.

7. Withdrawal from rental market (RPL § 216(1)(i))

What this means: Landlord must prove they're actually taking unit off market, not just temporarily to renovate and re-rent at higher price.

8. Refusal to execute reasonable renewal (RPL § 216(1)(j))

What this means: Landlord can't put unreasonable terms in renewal then claim you're unreasonable for refusing. Terms must comply with Good Cause and other laws.

9. Tenant refusal to provide access (RPL § 216(1)(k))

How Rent Increases Interact with Just Cause

Critical connection: Good Cause doesn't just limit eviction grounds—it caps rent increases.

Rent increase limits:

Why this matters for eviction:

Exceptions where higher increases allowed:

Notice Requirements Under Good Cause

Landlords must give specific written notice:

Non-renewal notice must:

Termination notice must:

Deficiency in notice: Creates defense in Housing Court. Landlord must prove both that just cause exists AND that they gave proper notice of it.

When Landlords Have Just Cause: Practical Examples

Understanding abstract legal standards requires seeing how they apply to real situations.

Scenario 1: Nonpayment Eviction

Situation: You're market-rate tenant in covered NYC building. Rent is $2,000/month. You stop paying after landlord imposes $500/month increase (25% increase).

No-cause jurisdiction:

NYC under Good Cause:

Scenario 2: Lease Violation

Situation: Your lease says no pets. You get a cat. Landlord serves notice to cure, you don't remove cat. Landlord seeks eviction.

Analysis under Good Cause:

Note: Even with just cause protections, you must comply with material lease terms. Just cause doesn't eliminate all eviction grounds—it eliminates arbitrary ones.

Scenario 3: Owner Move-In

Situation: Your landlord claims they need to move into your rent-stabilized apartment. Building has one vacant unit.

Analysis under Good Cause:

If no vacant units existed:

Scenario 4: Complaint Retaliation

Situation: You complain to HPD about lack of heat. Two months later, landlord refuses to renew your lease claiming they want to renovate.

Analysis:

This shows: Just cause grounds can be pretextual. Courts look at true motive.

Scenario 5: Month-to-Month Tenant

Situation: Your one-year lease expired. You stayed and landlord accepted rent, creating month-to-month tenancy. Landlord now wants you out to get higher-paying tenant.

Pre-Good Cause (market-rate):

Post-Good Cause (covered unit):

This shows: Good Cause protects month-to-month tenants same as lease tenants.

Proving and Challenging Just Cause in Court

Having just cause requirements means both sides must prove their positions.

Landlord's Burden of Proof

What landlords must prove:

How landlords prove just cause:

Common landlord failures:

Tenant's Defense Strategy

Challenging just cause:

Discovery to challenge grounds:

At trial:

The Clear and Convincing Standard

What this means: Higher than typical civil standard (preponderance = 51%) but lower than criminal (beyond reasonable doubt = ~99%). Roughly 75% certainty required.

Why this favors tenants:

Practical effect: When landlord claims owner move-in but can't produce concrete evidence of intent to relocate, they lose. When demolition is claimed but no permits filed, they lose. Standard requires proof, not just assertions.

Comparing Just Cause Protections: NY vs. Other States

California's AB 1482

Similarities to NY Good Cause:

Differences:

Oregon's Just Cause Law

Similarities:

Differences:

Seattle's Just Cause Ordinance

Similarities:

Differences:

What NY can learn: States and cities with longer-standing just cause laws have developed case law and regulations addressing edge cases NY will soon face. Tenant advocates watch these jurisdictions for effective enforcement strategies.

What This Means for Different Tenant Types

Market-Rate Tenants in Covered NYC Areas

Before Good Cause:

After Good Cause:

What you should do:

Rent-Stabilized/Controlled Tenants

Good Cause doesn't apply: You already have renewal rights and just cause protections under rent regulation laws.

Why this matters:

Tenants in Exempt Buildings

If your building is exempt:

Common invalid exemption claims:

Challenge improper exemption claims: Request proof. Landlord must substantiate exemption claim.

Tenants Outside Covered Areas

If you're in part of NY without Good Cause:

Practical Guidance: Knowing Your Rights

Step 1: Determine If Just Cause Applies to You

Questions to answer:

Resources to check:

Step 2: Understand What Grounds Apply

If just cause applies:

Key questions:

Step 3: Document Everything

Maintain records:

Why this matters: You may need to prove landlord lacks just cause, or that claimed ground is pretextual. Documentation is your evidence.

Step 4: Get Legal Help When Facing Eviction

Free legal services:

When to get help:

What attorney can do:

The Future of Just Cause Laws

National trend: More jurisdictions adopting just cause requirements as recognition grows that housing stability requires protection from arbitrary eviction.

New York specifics:

What this means for tenants:

What this means for landlords:

Your Location Determines Your Protections

Where you rent dictates whether your landlord needs a reason to evict you or can simply decide they want you gone. In just cause jurisdictions like covered areas of New York, San Francisco, Oregon, and New Jersey, landlords must prove legitimate grounds meeting legal standards. In no-cause jurisdictions, landlords need only follow notice procedures.

For New York market-rate tenants in covered areas, Good Cause Eviction Law transformed housing security overnight. Landlords who could previously refuse renewal for any reason now must prove valid just cause. Rent increases that could previously force you out through manufactured nonpayment now face statutory caps.

Understanding if just cause applies to your apartment, what grounds your landlord must prove, and how to challenge insufficient grounds in court determines whether you have true housing stability or remain at your landlord's mercy.

Know your local laws. Document everything. Assert your rights. Get legal help. Your housing security depends on understanding whether landlords need just cause where you live—and if they do, making them prove it.

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