Breaking a Lease Early in Missouri

Breaking a Lease Early in Missouri

In Missouri, a tenant can end a fixed-term lease early without penalty if one of several conditions are met, such as a privacy violation by the landlord. If none of the conditions are met, the tenant is liable for all remaining rent until a new tenant is found.

Reason Legally Acceptable?
Active Military Duty Yes
Early Termination Clause Yes
Domestic or Sexual Violence Yes
Uninhabitable Living Conditions Yes
Tenant Death Yes
Unenforceable/Void Lease Yes
Landlord Harassment Yes
Mental or Physical Disability Yes
Landlord Retaliation Yes
Job Relocation No
Backing Out Before Move-In No
Buying a House No

1. Active Military Duty

A tenant can break a lease early, without penalty, because of military duty in Missouri. Under federal law, active service members who move due to deployment or a permanent change of station can break their lease early
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. This protection begins on the date in which the tenant enters active duty and ends between 30-90 days after the date of discharge.

This right cannot be waived. Any lease clause attempting to is unenforceable.

What Qualifies as Military Duty?

  1. Servicemember Status. A tenant must be an active duty member of the military, Reserve, National Guard (mobilized under federal orders for more than 30 consecutive days), or be a commissioned officer of the Public Health Service or the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  2. Deployment. The tenant must receive a permanent change of station (“PCS”) order or deployment orders for a period of at least 90 days.
  3. Prior Signed Lease. A tenant must have signed the lease prior to active military service.

How to Prove or Verify Military Duty

To prove or verify military duty in Missouri, a tenant should give the landlord both of the following documents:

  1. A military ID (example) and
  2. Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders (example) OR a letter from the tenant’s commanding officer (example)

If a landlord doubts the authenticity of a tenant’s request to terminate a lease due to military duty, the landlord may submit a Record Request to obtain a report certifying active duty status of a tenant. However, the landlord must create an account to use the Record Request.

How to Terminate a Lease Due to Military Duty

A tenant must provide the landlord with a written notice and proper documentation to terminate a lease early for military duty. The lease will not terminate immediately. The tenant can terminate the lease within 30 days from when the notice is delivered.

For example, if the notice was delivered on the 23rd of March and the rent is due on the 1st of each month, the earliest the lease can terminate is May 1st. Therefore, rent is still due for the month of April.

2. Early Termination Clause

In Missouri, an early termination clause can allow a tenant to break a lease early, without penalty. A tenant could only break the lease if an early termination clause exists in the agreement. In Missouri, a landlord is not required to include an early termination clause.

A tenant may be able to terminate a lease early in exchange for paying a penalty through an early termination clause. An early termination clause will allow a tenant to break the lease after 30-60 days of providing notice.

Early Lease Termination Agreement

Not all leases contain an early termination clause. If this is the case, and both the landlord and tenant want to end the lease, they may mutually agree to end the lease. The landlord and tenant would write the terms of the termination agreement, sign it, and begin complying with the agreed upon terms to terminate the lease.

3. Domestic or Sexual Violence

A tenant can break a lease early, without penalty, because of domestic violence in Missouri. Under Missouri law, tenants who are victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, or sexual abuse are protected as long as the tenant can provide the landlord with proof of abuse
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.

This right cannot be waived. Any lease clause attempting to is unenforceable.

What Qualifies as Domestic Violence?

In Missouri, for an act of domestic violence to qualify as grounds for breaking a lease, all must be true:

  1. It is committed against the tenant or child of a tenant by a household member
  2. It is intended to result in harm, injury, or sexual assault OR it reasonably places the victim in fear of imminent harm or assault

How to Prove or Verify Domestic Violence

A tenant can prove or verify domestic violence by providing the landlord with one of the following: