Quick Answer (Let’s Keep It Simple)

A Notice of Non-Renewal of Lease is how you legally tell a tenant:

“You can stay until the lease ends… but not one day longer.”

No court. No eviction. No headache—if you do it right.


Why I’m Writing This (Real Deal Situation)

Recently, one of my investors called me about a duplex he’s buying.

Solid deal. Good area. Numbers made sense.

But there was one problem.

Tenants.

Not bad tenants… but not the kind you want to keep long term either.

And like a lot of investors, his first instinct was:

“Can we just remove them after closing?”

That’s where things can go sideways fast.

Because in Florida, you don’t just “remove” tenants.

You either:

  • Work with the lease

  • Or you work against the law

And trust me… the law always wins.

So instead of forcing the situation, we talked about the clean way to handle it.

That’s where the Notice of Non-Renewal comes in.


What a Notice of Non-Renewal Really Means

Let’s break this down like we’re talking over coffee.

This is NOT:

  • An eviction

  • A punishment

  • A legal fight

This IS:

  • A timing strategy

  • A control move

  • A clean exit plan

You’re simply letting the tenant finish their lease… and then not continuing it.

That’s it.


Why This Strategy Works So Well for Investors

When you buy a property with tenants, you’re stepping into an existing situation.

You didn’t pick them.

You inherited them.

And that means you need a plan.

Here’s why non-renewal is powerful:

  • You avoid eviction court

  • You reduce conflict

  • You stay compliant with Florida law

  • You control your timeline

  • You protect your investment

Think of it like this:

Eviction is like using a hammer.

Non-renewal is like using a key.

One breaks things.
One opens doors.


The Duplex Scenario (What We Did)

Back to the investor.

He’s buying a duplex.

Here’s what we looked at:

  • What type of lease do the tenants have?

  • When does the lease expire?

  • Are they month-to-month or fixed term?

  • Are they paying on time?

One unit:

  • Month-to-month

  • Rent slightly below market

Second unit:

  • Lease ending in a few months

  • Tenant okay, but not ideal

Now here’s where most people mess up.

They rush.

They want immediate control.

But real investors play the long game.

So instead of forcing tenants out…

We mapped out:

  • Send proper notice

  • Time the exit

  • Plan renovation or repositioning

  • Increase rent after turnover

That’s how you win.


Florida Rules (Keep This in Mind)

Florida is actually pretty straightforward… if you follow the timing.

Month-to-Month Tenants

You need to give at least:

  • 15 days’ notice before the next rental period

Example:

  • Rent due on the 1st

  • Notice must be given before the 15th of the previous month

Miss it… and you’re stuck another month.


Fixed-Term Lease

If there’s a lease:

  • You must wait until it expires

  • Then give proper non-renewal notice (based on lease terms)

Important:

Always check the lease first.

Some leases require:

  • 30 days notice

  • 60 days notice

If you ignore that… you’re back in trouble.


What Happens If You Do Nothing?

This is where it gets interesting.

A lot of landlords think:

“I’ll just wait and deal with it later.”

Bad idea.

Here’s what happens:

  • Lease ends

  • Tenant stays

  • It automatically becomes month-to-month

Now instead of a clean exit…

You’ve created a new agreement.

And guess what?

Now you need to restart the process.

That one mistake can cost you:

  • Time

  • Rent increases

  • Renovation delays

  • Opportunity


The Right Way to Do It (Step by Step)

Let’s keep this super simple.

Step 1: Review the Lease

Check:

  • End date

  • Notice requirements

  • Any special clauses


Step 2: Decide Your Plan

Ask yourself:

  • Am I renovating?

  • Raising rent?

  • Selling?

  • Re-tenanting?

Your strategy determines your timing.


Step 3: Send the Notice Early

Best practice:

  • 30 to 60 days before lease ends

Even if the law says less.

Why?

Because smooth transitions make you more money.


Step 4: Keep It Professional

No emotions.

No long explanations.

Just:

  • Clear

  • Simple

  • Direct


Step 5: Prepare for Turnover

Before they leave, already have a plan:

  • Contractor ready

  • Leasing plan ready

  • Pricing ready

This is where real investors separate themselves.


What Should the Notice Include?

Keep it clean and clear.

You don’t need to overcomplicate it.

Include:

  • Tenant name

  • Property address

  • Lease end date

  • Move-out date

  • Statement of non-renewal

  • Instructions for keys

  • Contact info

That’s it.

No essays.

No drama.


Common Mistakes Investors Make

Let me save you a headache here.

Mistake 1: Waiting Too Long

You think you have time… until you don’t.


Mistake 2: Verbal Notice

If it’s not written…

It doesn’t exist.


Mistake 3: Ignoring the Lease

The lease always wins.

Always.


Mistake 4: Getting Emotional

Even if the tenant is frustrating…

Stay professional.


Mistake 5: Trying to Force Them Out

That’s how you end up:

  • In court

  • Paying legal fees

  • Delaying your project


Pro Tip: Offer a Win-Win Exit

Here’s something most investors don’t think about.

Sometimes it’s worth offering:

  • Small relocation assistance

  • Flexible move-out timing

  • Deposit incentives

Why?

Because speed is money.

If spending a little gets you the unit faster…

You win.


The Bigger Picture (This Is Where Wealth Is Built)

This isn’t just about one duplex.

This is about how you operate as an investor.

The best investors:

  • Think ahead

  • Control timelines

  • Avoid unnecessary conflict

  • Execute clean systems

That’s how you scale.


What We Expect on This Duplex

Here’s how this one will likely play out:

  • Send proper notices

  • One tenant leaves quickly

  • One may take full term

Then:

  • Light renovation

  • Rent increase

  • Stabilize property

Same building.

Same location.

Better performance.

That’s the game.


Key Takeaways

  • Non-renewal is the cleanest way to remove tenants

  • It is NOT an eviction

  • Timing matters more than anything

  • Always follow the lease first

  • Send notices early

  • Stay professional

  • Plan your next move before they leave

Want a Ready-to-Use Version?

Instead of creating this from scratch, you can use this clean, investor-friendly version here:

👉 https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xoFd3U7_rMxCx38QwS0drSJqAqJ-6tt0nwRHxokNDE8/edit?tab=t.0

You can copy it, customize it, and use it right away for your own properties.


Final Thought

A lot of investors think the money is made when you buy the deal.

That’s only part of it.

The real money is made in how you manage what comes after.

This is one of those moments.

Handle it right… and everything flows.

Handle it wrong… and you’ll feel it.


Keep it consistent, stay patient, stay true—if I did it, so can you. This is Jorge Vazquez, CEO of Graystone Investment Group and all our amazing companies, and Coach at Property Profit Academy. Thanks for tuning in—until the next article, take care and keep building!

If you’d like to connect directly with me, feel free to book a time here: https://graystoneig.com/ceo.

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author avatar
Jorge Vazquez CEO
Jorge Vazquez is the CEO of Graystone Investment Group and coach at Property Profit Academy. With 20+ years of experience and 3,500+ real estate deals, he helps investors build wealth through smart strategies, from acquisition to property management. Featured in Forbes and winner of multiple awards, Jorge is known for making real estate simple and impactful. Real estate investor, educator, and CEO helping others build wealth through smart, long-term real estate strategies.