Eviction Law Comparison
Compare key metrics between Alabama — No-Fault Eviction and Alaska — End of Lease Term. Data sourced from State Legislature & Legal Information Institute (2025).
| Metric | Alabama — No-Fault Eviction | Alaska — End of Lease Term |
|---|---|---|
| name | Alabama — No-Fault Eviction | Alaska — End of Lease Term |
| state | Alabama | Alaska |
| state code | AL | AK |
| reason | No-Fault Eviction | End of Lease Term |
| category | No-Fault Eviction | End of Lease Term |
| notice days | 60 | 30 |
| cure period | No cure period. Includes substantial renovations, demolition, or withdrawal from rental market. May require relocation assistance payments. | No cure period applies. The landlord simply declines to renew the lease and provides proper notice before the lease expiration date. |
| court process | 1) Serve proper notice to tenant. 2) If tenant does not comply, file Eviction Action complaint at the local court. 3) Court hearing is typically scheduled within 10-30 days of filing. 4) If the court rules in landlord's favor, a Writ of Possession is issued. 5) Sheriff/Marshal enforces the writ, giving tenant final opportunity to vacate (usually 24-72 hours). | 1) Serve proper notice to tenant. 2) If tenant does not comply, file Eviction Action complaint at the local court. 3) Court hearing is typically scheduled within 10-30 days of filing. 4) If the court rules in landlord's favor, a Writ of Possession is issued. 5) Sheriff/Marshal enforces the writ, giving tenant final opportunity to vacate (usually 24-72 hours). |
| tenant rights | Right to receive proper written notice before eviction proceedings begin; Right to appear and defend in court; Right to a trial before being removed from the property; Right to remain in possession until court order is issued and enforced; Protection against retaliatory eviction for exercising legal rights | Right to receive proper written notice before eviction proceedings begin; Right to appear and defend in court; Right to a trial before being removed from the property; Right to remain in possession until court order is issued and enforced; Protection against retaliatory eviction for exercising legal rights |
| landlord requirements | Must provide proper written notice in the required format; Must file eviction through the court system — self-help evictions are illegal; Must not shut off utilities, change locks, or remove tenant's property without court order; Must follow all state and local procedural requirements precisely | Must provide proper written notice in the required format; Must file eviction through the court system — self-help evictions are illegal; Must not shut off utilities, change locks, or remove tenant's property without court order; Must follow all state and local procedural requirements precisely |
| penalties | Illegal eviction in Alabama may result in: tenant's right to remain in or return to the property; landlord liability for actual damages suffered by the tenant; court costs and reasonable attorney's fees awarded to tenant; punitive damages at court's discretion | Illegal eviction in Alaska may result in: tenant's right to remain in or return to the property; landlord liability for actual damages suffered by the tenant; court costs and reasonable attorney's fees awarded to tenant; punitive damages at court's discretion |
| exemptions | Government-subsidized housing may have additional protections; Eviction during a federally declared disaster or moratorium may be prohibited; Active military members protected under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) | Eviction during a federally declared disaster or moratorium may be prohibited; Active military members protected under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) |
| filing fee | $45-$75 | $75-$100 |
| timeline | Notice period: 60 days. Court scheduling: 10-30 days after filing. Writ of Possession enforcement: 3-10 days after judgment. Estimated total timeline: 74-120 days from initial notice to physical removal. Uncontested cases may proceed faster. | Notice period: 30 days. Court scheduling: 10-30 days after filing. Writ of Possession enforcement: 3-10 days after judgment. Estimated total timeline: 44-90 days from initial notice to physical removal. Uncontested cases may proceed faster. |
| legal reference | Alabama Landlord-Tenant Statutes — Just cause / no-fault provisions | Alaska Landlord-Tenant Statutes |
| last updated | 2025-01-01 | 2025-01-01 |
Our team analyzes data from State Legislature & Legal Information Institute to deliver accurate, up-to-date information. All data is verified and cross-referenced with official sources.