Why “Problem Tenants” Are One of the Biggest Legal Risks for Landlords — and How to Handle Them
Owning rental property means you’re not just collecting rent — you’re managing relationships, contracts, and risks. One of the most dangerous scenarios? A tenant who falls behind on rent, breaks rules, or causes damage.. what many landlords call a “problem tenant.”
Because as a landlord you’re essentially running a business: each lease, each notice, each repair request becomes a legal step. A mis-typed notice, improper service, or missing documentation can result in lost income, forced write-offs, or worse.
That’s why legal support from LegalShield is such a game-changer. With a monthly legal plan you get access to attorneys who specialize in landlord-tenant law, document review, and dispute resolution — meaning you don’t have to wait until things go sideways.

1. What “Problem Tenant” Really Means
A “problem tenant” isn’t just someone who occasionally pays late. It’s someone whose actions — or your response — may create legal exposure. Here are common types:
- Late or partial rent payments. (LegalShield says: “When dealing with a tenant that is late… consider your options carefully.”) LegalShield
- Unauthorized guests or pets, subleases, overcrowding. LegalShield
- Property damage or excessive maintenance requests not covered by the lease. LegalShield
- Illegal or disruptive behavior (drug activity, nuisance complaints) exposing you to liability. LegalShield
- Tenants without a written lease, holdover tenants, or those misclassified, which complicates eviction. LegalShield+2LegalShield+2
Each of these scenarios isn’t just a headache — it’s a legal risk. The good news: the moment you recognize it, you can act legally rather than scrambling later.
2. Key Legal Steps You Must Get Right
a) Late Rent or Partial Payment
Follow your state’s law exactly. LegalShield points out you must serve the correct notice (for example: Notice to Pay or Quit). Service method matters (mail vs personal).
Miss a step and courts may throw out your eviction or delay things—and you’ll keep paying rent.
b) Lease Violations/Unauthorized Use
When a tenant allows unapproved pets or sublets without permission:
- Review your lease to see whether it prohibits those activities clearly.
- Document the violation.
- Consult your attorney before sending a termination notice. LegalShield’s provider lawyers help you assess if the guest qualifies legally as a tenant or hold-over. LegalShield
c) Property Damage & Habitability Issues
Sarcastically: “No, weekly complaints about AC aren’t always your fault — but you do have to respond.”
If you don’t respond, you expose yourself. If you over-respond without documentation, you may be stuck absorbing costs. LegalShield notes: “Are you unsure if you are responsible for a specific repair or what to do about a tenant that calls to complain about something every week?” LegalShield
Document everything: photos, emails, repair receipts. Use attorney advice when uncertainties arise.
d) Eviction Process & Tenant Defenses
Eviction isn’t just “tenant out”. Courts allow multiple defenses. For example:
- You didn’t serve the notice properly.
- You accepted rent from a tenant who stayed after lease, creating a new tenancy.
LegalShield emphasizes: Having a lawyer review documents and the process saves you time and money.
3. How LegalShield Helps Landlords with Problem Tenants
Because you can’t afford to wait until the problem becomes court-heavy, LegalShield provides:
- Legal consultation with a lawyer familiar with your state’s laws.
- Review of tenant notices, lease addendums, and communications. (Many memberships include letters or calls made on your behalf.)
- Strategy-help: Which path is best for your situation (repair request vs eviction vs negotiation) — and how to document things to protect yourself.
- Affordable access: Instead of $250-$400/hr lawyer bill, you pay a monthly legal-plan rate.
4. A Landlord’s Action Plan for Problem Tenants
Here’s a checklist you can implement today:
- Ensure your lease has clear violation terms (pets, sublets, payment due dates, damage, etc.).
- Document tenant behaviour from Day 1: late payments, guest records, complaints, damage photos.
- Use proper notices: Determine what your state requires and use the correct form and service method.
- Know when to call in the attorney:
- Tenant not paying for > 30 days
- Property damage or illegal activity
- Hold-over tenant refusing to leave
- Use your LegalShield membership: Submit lease or notice drafts, talk to your provider lawyer, get advice before legal filing.
- After resolution (tenant leaves or is evicted), review what went wrong and update your lease or tenant-screening process accordingly.
5. Real-Life Example
A landlord accepted rent after the lease expired, effectively creating a month-to-month tenancy without realizing it. When a hold-over tenant refused to leave, the eviction process dragged on 90 days — costing lost rent and legal fees. If the landlord had contacted an attorney early (via LegalShield), they would have been advised to take immediate hold-over action and served proper notice, saving time and money.
Conclusion
Dealing with problem tenants is more than a nuisance—it’s a risk to your investment, your time, and your sanity. But the good news? With the right processes and legal support in place, you can handle issues proactively and minimize damage.
When you have an experienced attorney on call (like through LegalShield), you’re not just reacting—you’re protecting. Don’t wait until things spiral out of control. Act early. Be prepared. Protect your rental business.
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