Tenants must:
- Pay rent, in full and on time.
- Take care of the property in a reasonable manner.
- Not sublet the property or take in additional residents without the landlord’s written permission.

There are three main situations in which property owners and managers can evict their renters. These scenarios include:
Owners and managers often include language in a rental contract stating no illegal or dangerous activity can be conducted by a renter on a property, the website states, which gives substantial merit to one’s choice to evict a renter taking part in these activities.
If a tenant fails to pay rent for one or two months, property owners and managers tend to be lenient and simply mandate the renter make up for it by a certain period in the near future. However, continuous failure to pay provides you with considerable legal merit to kick a renter out of a unit.
While there may be other situations where eviction is feasible (and recommended), these are the primary conditions which call for removing a tenant from a property, according to the website Bigger Pockets.