How much notice must a landlord give before entering in Maryland?

Verified July 9, 2026 All Maryland topics →

Maryland adopted its first statewide landlord entry-notice law effective October 1, 2025: written notice at least 24 hours in advance, with entry confined to 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Saturday, unless the tenant agrees in writing to another time — making Maryland one of the only states to bar routine Sunday entry by statute.

Permitted purposes cover repairs, inspections, showings, safety, government-ordered work, and tenant-requested visits, and a landlord may enter without notice only in an emergency threatening imminent harm to the property or occupants. Courts can enjoin violations and award damages for breach of the tenant's covenant of quiet enjoyment. Because the law is this new, virtually every guide published before mid-2025 — including major legal aggregators — still says Maryland has no entry-notice statute; that is no longer true.

Maryland entry notice at a glance

Advance notice required 24 hours
Notice standard RP § 8-221 (new — HB 1076 (2025), Ch. 564, effective 2025-10-01): the landlord must provide WRITTEN notice at least 24 hours before entering, and entry must occur between 7:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday unless the tenant agrees in writing to another time.
Permitted reasons Repairs, maintenance, or improvements; inspections; showing the unit to prospective purchasers, tenants, or contractors; ensuring the protection and safety of the property; completing government-ordered work; or responding to a tenant's written request (§ 8-221(a)).
Emergency exception Yes
Time-of-day restrictions 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., Monday through Saturday — no Sunday entry — unless the tenant agrees in writing to another time (§ 8-221(b)(1)(ii)). One of the few state statutes with fixed clock hours AND a day-of-week restriction.

Notes and caveats

This is the MD record's second modern stale-source trap (with the deposit cap): 'Maryland has no entry statute' was true until 2025-10-01 and is repeated everywhere. Codification quirk verified on the official site: the BILL text of HB 1076 says § 8-220, but codification landed at § 8-221 — cite 8-221, not 8-220. The 7am-7pm Mon-Sat window with written-consent override is stricter than the FL-style time restrictions and worth the answer box alongside the 24-hour figure. Emergency exception covers imminent protection of property or occupant safety (§ 8-221(b)(2)). Local codes (e.g., Montgomery County) may add requirements — out of scope v1, flagged.

Statute citations

How this record was verified: Direct read of statute text on the official Maryland General Assembly site (mgaleg.maryland.gov): Real Property §§ 8-203 (read in full twice — independent fetches matched verbatim), 8-203.1, 8-208, 8-209 (read twice), 8-209.1, 8-221 (read twice), and 8-402. Session-law provenance verified on official mgaleg bill pages: HB 693 (2024) / Ch. 124 (deposit cap cut, eff. 2024-10-01), HB 151 (2023) / Ch. 146 (§ 8-209 rent-increase notice, eff. 2023-10-01), HB 1076 (2025) / Ch. 564 (§ 8-221 entry notice, eff. 2025-10-01), and HB 80 (2026) status. Interest mechanics cross-checked against the Maryland DHCD official deposit-interest calculator page; local rent-stabilization programs confirmed on official Takoma Park, Montgomery County, and Prince George's County government pages.