Question:

How long after I get a 72 hour notice do i have before i'm evicted?

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I live in oregon. thx in advance!!

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  1. Probably a good idea to be out before 72 hours has passed, in order to avoid a forcible eviction involving law enforcement officials.


  2. The sheriff will be keying the door in 72 hours.  It's best not to be there.

  3. The 72 hour notice is a "pay or quit" notice, right?  After that time period is up the landlord will start the eviction process.  Very hard to say how long the eviction process will take, it varies by state and I don't know Oregon law at all.  Still, you will get notice about when your court date is, so if you lose the court date it will be sometime after that (about 1-2 weeks after it where I live).

  4. Why don't you pay the rent as agreed when you took possession of the rental location? That way you don't have to worry about getting evicted.

    If you plan to continue renting, an eviction will bar you from many, if not all, decent housing choices in the future.

    If you cannot pay, you must vacate the premises within those three days and return all keys to the owner/manager immediately.

    Many times, you will still have a collection/unlawful detainer appear on your credit report.

    Also, you may be charged for the next 30 days of rent or even the term of the remainder of the written lease or until the unit re-rents----------that's a lot of money to pay if you plan to move out anyway.

    One word of advise...don't get evicted.


  5. UMMMMMMMM Probably 72 hours!

    You are kidding, right?

  6. You wont be evicted in 72 hours and all the people that said that is wrong. The 72 hour is 72 hours to fix the problem. If you don't then you will be evicted.  

  7. Uhm....72 hours is 3 days...so i would guess,,,,about 3 days..wow

  8. 72 hours is a "3 day pay or quit" notice. If you can pay your probably ok, but no one can be expected to leave in just 3 days. At the end of the 3 days, the landlord must give you a 30 day written notice. If your still there at the end of that 30 days he'll have to file in court and the judge will give you another 30 days. This buys you a lot of time, the only problem is if it goes to court, you'll be stuck with court cost.


  9. If you received an eviction notice, and you don't leave, they have to file in court to have you removed from the premises.  By the time you are served with a court date, go to court, and the judge grants possession, you may be talking up to a month.  But, it will go on your credit record.

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