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

Verified July 8, 2026 All Pennsylvania topics →

Pennsylvania is one of the minority of states with no statute requiring advance notice before a landlord enters an occupied rental unit — the Landlord and Tenant Act of 1951 is silent on entry, so the lease governs, backstopped by the tenant's right to quiet enjoyment.

Standard practice, and the term most Pennsylvania leases specify, is 24 hours' notice for non-emergency entry, with immediate entry accepted for genuine emergencies like fire, gas leaks, or burst pipes. 'No statute' does not mean 'unrestricted entry': a landlord entering without a lease right or consent risks breach-of-lease and harassment claims.

Pennsylvania entry notice at a glance

Advance notice required No fixed statutory period (see notice standard)
Notice standard No Pennsylvania statute requires advance notice before landlord entry; entry rights and notice are governed by the lease and by the tenant's possessory right to quiet enjoyment. Well-drafted leases conventionally specify 24 hours for non-emergency entry.
Permitted reasons Not enumerated by statute; governed by the lease. Absent a reserved right of entry, the landlord's non-emergency access depends on the tenant's consent.
Emergency exception Yes
Time-of-day restrictions Not addressed by statute

Notes and caveats

notice_hours is null because no entry-notice statute exists. The citation documents the statutory absence via the official full-act text. Page copy must distinguish 'no statutory requirement' from 'unrestricted entry,' mirroring the MI record.

Statute citations

How this record was verified: Direct read of the Landlord and Tenant Act of 1951 (P.L. 69, No. 20) text on the official PA General Assembly site (legis.state.pa.us HTM full text and section 512 page): Sections 511.1 (68 P.S. 250.511a), 511.2 (250.511b), 511.3 (250.511c), 512 (250.512), 501 (250.501). Absence of rent-increase, late-fee, and entry statutes verified against the full Act text and multiple concurring secondary sources.