Getting Evicted in Alaska

I'm facing eviction — here's what Alaska law says and what to do next.

Alaska Law

Statute: Alaska Stat. § 34.03.210

Deadline: 3 days

Penalty: Tenant may recover one and one-half times actual damages plus reasonable attorney fees

What is getting evicted?

Your landlord cannot just throw you out. Federal and state laws require landlords to follow specific legal procedures before they can evict you. An eviction without proper notice and a court order is illegal — it's called a "self-help eviction" and you can sue for it.

Even if you owe rent, your landlord must give you written notice, file a case in court, and get a judge's order before you can be removed. You have the right to appear in court and defend yourself.

What to Do If Your Landlord Is Trying to Evict You

Step 1: Read the notice carefully. It should state the reason for eviction and how many days you have to respond or fix the problem ("cure period").

Step 2: If the notice says "pay rent or quit," you can stop the eviction by paying the full amount owed within the cure period.

Step 3: If you receive a court summons, SHOW UP. Many tenants lose eviction cases by default because they don't appear. You have the right to present your defense.

Step 4: Gather evidence: your lease, rent receipts, photos of the property condition, any communication with your landlord.

Step 5: Contact your local legal aid office. Many offer free representation in eviction cases. Call 211 or visit lawhelp.org to find help in your area.

How Alaska differs from federal law

Alaska's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act provides tenant protections:

  • For nonpayment of rent, landlords must give 7 days' notice to pay or quit
  • For lease violations, landlords must give 10 days' notice to cure (or the tenancy terminates in 15 days if not cured)
  • For month-to-month tenancies, 30 days' notice is required to terminate
  • Self-help evictions (changing locks, shutting off utilities) are illegal in Alaska
  • Retaliatory evictions are prohibited
  • Tenants have the right to appear and contest eviction in court

Additional steps in Alaska

Contact Alaska Legal Services Corporation at (907) 272-9431 or alsc-law.org. Alaska Housing Finance Corporation: (907) 338-6100.

What you should NOT do

Don't ignore the notice. Eviction timelines are strict. Missing a deadline can mean losing your right to fight it.

Don't move out just because the landlord says to. Until there's a court order, you have every right to stay.

Don't withhold rent without legal justification. If you have habitability issues, follow your state's "repair and deduct" or rent escrow procedures instead.

Don't destroy property. Damaging the rental unit can result in additional legal liability and hurt your case.

Don't wait — the clock is ticking.

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This page is general legal information for Alaska, not legal advice for your specific situation. Laws change, and how a statute applies depends on facts we don't know. For advice on your matter, consult a licensed attorney in Alaska.

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