Notice periods

Notice period Vaud: terminate your Swiss lease correctly

A correct rental termination in canton Vaud depends on three things: the right notice period, the correct termination date, and verifiable delivery. Miss any one of these and you stay a tenant for three or six more months — still paying rent.

Key facts

Residential lease
3 months notice
Commercial lease
6 months notice
Termination dates
03-31, 06-30, 09-30
Registered mail
Strongly recommended (BGE 143 III 15)

How to terminate correctly

  1. 1

    Check the notice period and date in your contract

    Read your lease contract. In canton Vaud the statutory minimum notice applies — your contract may specify longer periods. What counts is the day the letter arrives at the landlord, not when you send it (BGE 143 III 15).

  2. 2

    Calculate the latest send date

    Count back 3 months from your termination date. Add at least 7 days for registered-mail delivery. This prevents the letter from arriving one day too late.

  3. 3

    Write the termination letter with all required information

    Address the letter to all landlords listed in the contract. State the rental apartment clearly (address, unit number if any), the desired termination date, and include your signature. For married couples, both spouses must sign (Art. 169 Civil Code).

  4. 4

    Send by registered mail and keep receipt for 5 years

    Send by registered mail. This is the only way to prove when it arrived at the landlord. Keep the delivery receipt for at least 5 years — legal deadlines for a potential conciliation procedure run that long.

Special rules in canton Vaud

  • Write the notice letter in French — this is the official language of the canton.
  • Traditional "dates fixes cantonales": March 31, June 30, September 30 (April 1, July 1, October 1).
  • Some municipalities also recognize January 1 (December 31) — check your lease and local practice.
  • Always check your lease contract — it may restrict termination to one or two of these dates only.
  • Notice must arrive 3 full calendar months before the termination date.

Legal basis: OR Art. 266a–266o; VMWG; Vaud cantonal practice ("dates fixes cantonales")

Conciliation authority in Vaud

Commission de conciliation en matière de baux à loyer

Procédure en français.

CO Art. 274a — Conciliation proceedings in rental matters are free of charge.

Frequently asked questions

When can I terminate my lease in Vaud?
You can terminate your lease in canton Vaud at any time, provided you respect the 3-month notice period. Termination takes effect on the next permitted termination date. What matters is when the letter arrives at the landlord — not when you send it (BGE 143 III 15).
Do I have to send the termination by registered mail?
Registered mail is not legally mandatory — but strongly recommended. Only registered mail lets you prove when your letter arrived at the landlord. Per BGE 143 III 15, the arrival date counts, not the sending date. Keep the delivery receipt for at least 5 years.
What happens if I miss the notice period?
Miss the deadline and you stay a tenant for another 3 months — until the next possible termination date. At CHF 2,000/month rent, that's 6’000 CHF extra. A mistake makes the termination at the desired date invalid — with no way to retract.
Can I terminate early?
Yes, under CO Art. 264. You must present a solvent and suitable replacement tenant willing to take over the lease on the same terms. The landlord may only reject a replacement for important reasons (BGE 119 II 36).
Which conciliation authority is responsible?
The conciliation authority at the location of your rental is responsible. In canton Vaud that is Commission de conciliation en matière de baux à loyer. The procedure is free of charge per CO Art. 274a and CCP Art. 113 para. 2 lit. c — conciliation is mandatory before filing a lawsuit.

Other cantons

Find notice periods and conciliation authorities for all 25 other Swiss cantons.

Calculate your notice period for Vaud now

Our deadline calculator shows you the exact termination date and latest send date — based on cantonal rules and BGE 143 III 15.