Arizona Landlord Entry Notice
48 hoursArizona landlords generally must give at least 48 hours' notice before entering an occupied rental unit — the FAQ below covers how the rule applies. Genuine emergencies (fire, flooding, urgent repairs) are exempt from the notice requirement.
Educational information: generated from our Arizona law database (last updated 2024-01-01). Not legal advice.
How Arizona compares
25 of 51 US jurisdictions set a fixed statutory minimum notice period for landlord entry; the rest apply a reasonable-notice standard or rely on custom and lease terms. Here is how Arizona compares with other states in our database.
| State | Landlord Entry Notice |
|---|---|
| Arizona | 48 hours |
| Arkansas | 24 hours customary (no statutory minimum) |
| California | 24 hours |
| Colorado | 48 hours customary (no statutory minimum) |
| Connecticut | 24 hours typical ("reasonable notice" standard) |
Frequently asked questions
- How much notice does a landlord need to enter my apartment in Arizona?
- Generally at least 48 hours. Landlord must give at least 2 days (48 hours) notice. Entry must be at reasonable times. Notice not required for tenant-requested maintenance.
- Can a landlord enter without notice in an emergency in Arizona?
- Yes. Emergencies such as fire or serious water leaks allow immediate entry without advance notice.
- Can my lease waive the entry notice requirement in Arizona?
- Clauses granting the landlord unlimited entry without notice are a common red flag and are frequently unenforceable. Have any such clause reviewed.
Check Your Lease Against Arizona Law
Not sure whether your lease complies with Arizona law? Upload it and our analyzer flags problem clauses — deposit terms, entry rights, fees and prohibited provisions — using the same statute-backed database this page is generated from.
Analyze My Lease FreeEducational tool — not legal advice. First analysis is free, no signup required.
More Arizona lease law guides
Educational information generated from state statute data — not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in Arizona for your specific situation.