                                 CODE OF VIRGINIA

PERIODIC TENANCY; HOLDOVER REMEDIES (§ 55.1-1253)

A. The landlord or the tenant may terminate a week-to-week tenancy by serving a
written notice on the other at least seven days prior to the next rent due date.
The landlord or the tenant may terminate a month-to-month tenancy by serving a
written notice on the other at least 30 days prior to the next rent due date,
unless the rental agreement provides for a different notice period. The landlord
and the tenant may agree in writing to an early termination of a rental
agreement. In the event that no such agreement is reached, the provisions of
&#xA7; 55.1-1251 shall control.

B. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection A, any owner of a multifamily
premises that fails to renew the greater of either 20 or more month-to-month
tenancies or 50 percent of the month-to-month tenancies within a consecutive
30-day period in the same multifamily premises shall serve written notice on
each such tenant at least 60 days prior to allowing such tenancy to expire. For
the purposes of this subsection, 60 days&#8217; notice shall not be required to
allow a tenancy to expire where the tenant has failed to pay rent in accordance
with the rental agreement.

C. If the tenant remains in possession without the landlord&#8217;s consent
after expiration of the term of the rental agreement or its termination, the
landlord may bring an action for possession and may also recover actual damages,
reasonable attorney fees, and court costs, unless the tenant proves by a
preponderance of the evidence that the failure of the tenant to vacate the
dwelling unit as of the termination date was reasonable. The landlord may
include in the rental agreement a reasonable liquidated damage penalty, not to
exceed an amount equal to 150 percent of the per diem of the monthly rent, for
each day the tenant remains in the dwelling unit after the termination date
specified in the landlord&#8217;s notice. However, if the dwelling unit is a
public housing unit or other housing unit subject to regulation by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development, any liquidated damage penalty shall
not exceed an amount equal to the per diem of the monthly rent set out in the
lease agreement. If the landlord consents to the tenant&#8217;s continued
occupancy, &#xA7; 55.1-1204 applies.

D. In the event of termination of a rental agreement where the tenant remains in
possession with the agreement of the landlord either as a hold-over tenant or a
month-to-month tenant and no new rental agreement is entered into, the terms of
the terminated agreement shall remain in effect and govern the hold-over or
month-to-month tenancy, except that the amount of rent shall be either as
provided in the terminated rental agreement or the amount set forth in a written
notice to the tenant, provided that such new rent amount shall not take effect
until the next rent due date coming 30 days after the notice.

HISTORY: 1974, c. 680, § 55-248.37; 1977, c. 427; 1982, c. 260; 2004, c. 123;
2005, c. 805; 2009, c. 663; 2013, c. 563; 2019, c. 712; 2023, c. 679.