True", the Minnesota eviction notice, what is an eviction notice? - An eviction notice, or notice to quit, is a letter sent by the landlord to the tenant notifying them that they should either take or stop a certain action or vacate the rented premises. - An eviction notice can be of two types: conditional and unconditional. - In a conditional eviction notice, a tenant is given time to remedy the breach of the lease. - In an unconditional eviction notice, a landlord terminates the lease without any alternative options for a tenant. - An eviction notice should include information about the tenant and the landlord, the reason for sending the notice, the date by which the tenant should take or stop a certain action, the consequences of non-compliance, the date and way of notice delivery, and the landlord's signature in the form of a certificate of service attached to the notice. - To evict a tenant in Minnesota for non-payment, there is no statutory grace period for rent payment. - This enables the landlord to send the notice to the tenant the very next day after the rent is due, unless otherwise stated in the lease. - The Minnesota legislature gives the landlord the right to send a 14-day notice to quit to a tenant at will who is occupying the premises without a written lease or with a contract without an end date. - In case of all other tenancies, the landlord is not required to send a notice prior to evicting the tenant for non-payment of rent. - According to Minnesota laws, for non-compliance with other terms of the lease, the landlord is not required to give the tenant time to correct the issue. - However, a prior notice before the start of the eviction process is one of the state's requirements. The state law does not set...