Rhode Island Lease Termination / Notice to Vacate
Create a Rhode Island-specific notice to vacate in minutes. We pre-select Rhode Island for you and include reminders about Rhode Island requirements — review and verify against current Rhode Island law before signing.
- ✓ From tenant or from landlord
- ✓ Correct move-out date and forwarding address block
- ✓ Signature-ready PDF — no subscription
Basics
Parties
NOTICE OF LEASE TERMINATION
- ✓ One-time payment — no subscription, no monthly fees
- ✓ Signature-ready PDF, edit and re-download anytime
- ✓ Not happy? Refund with a quick note
LawDepot $35/mo · attorney $300+. You pay once.
SnapLegal provides self-help document templates, not legal advice, and is not a law firm. Laws vary by state and change over time — review your document and verify state requirements before signing.
Per document · one-time payment · no subscription
- ✓ Build & preview for free
- ✓ Signature-ready PDF, edit & re-download anytime
- ✓ State-aware clauses & reminders
- ✓ Refund if you're not happy (just tell us why)
LawDepot $35/mo · an attorney $300+. You pay once.
FAQ
Is there really no subscription?
Correct. You pay $2.99 per document and can edit and re-download it as much as you like. No monthly fee.
Are these documents state-specific?
Each document includes the common terms most US situations need plus a field for your state and reminders about state-specific rules (deposit caps, notice periods, disclosures). Laws change, so always verify the final document against your state's current rules.
Is this legal advice?
No. SnapLegal provides self-help document templates and is not a law firm. For complex or high-value matters, have a licensed attorney review your document.
Is my information private?
Completely. Everything you enter stays in your browser and the PDF is generated on your device — nothing is uploaded to our servers.
What if I'm not satisfied?
Email us with your order number and a short note and we'll refund you.
How much notice do I have to give?
Most month-to-month tenancies require 30 days' written notice, but some states require more (e.g. 60 days) depending on how long the tenant has lived there. Enter the date that satisfies your state's required notice period.
Is this the same as an eviction?
No. This is a no-fault notice to end a tenancy. An eviction for non-payment or violation uses a pay-or-quit/cure-or-quit notice instead.