How much notice must a landlord give before entering in North Carolina?

Verified July 8, 2026 All North Carolina topics →

North Carolina has no statute requiring any particular advance notice before a landlord enters a rental unit — no fixed hours and no codified 'reasonable notice' standard.

Entry rights come from the lease, so landlords should reserve them in writing and honor whatever notice the lease promises; without a reserved right, the tenant's exclusive possession means entry can amount to trespass. The 24-hour notice commonly used by North Carolina property managers is professional convention, not law, and the habitability statute's repair duties assume access without creating a notice rule.

North Carolina entry notice at a glance

Advance notice required No fixed statutory period (see notice standard)
Notice standard No North Carolina statute sets an advance-notice period or general standard for landlord entry into an occupied dwelling; Chapter 42 contains no residential entry-notice section. The lease controls entry rights, bounded by the tenant's right of exclusive possession and the covenant of quiet enjoyment; absent a reserved right of entry, non-consensual entry risks trespass.
Permitted reasons As provided in the lease. Chapter 42 does not enumerate permitted residential entry reasons; the landlord's repair duties under G.S. 42-42 presuppose access but do not create a notice rule.
Emergency exception Not addressed by statute
Time-of-day restrictions Not addressed by statute

Notes and caveats

notice_hours is null and emergency_exception is null because no statute exists to create either — same convention as the TX and GA records. Page copy should emphasize lease drafting.

Statute citations

How this record was verified: Direct read of statute text on the official North Carolina General Assembly site (ncleg.gov / ncleg.net): Tenant Security Deposit Act Article 6 (G.S. 42-50 through 42-56) full article text, G.S. 42-46 (full current text including the SL 2025-52 rewrite of subsection (i)), G.S. 42-14, and G.S. 42-14.1 (operative sentence confirmed in the official Article 1 text). H990 (2025) status verified via LegiScan against the ncleg bill record.