Can your landlord ask you to vacate your home with just a WhatsApp message or a late-night text? In today’s digital era, landlords and tenants routinely communicate through phone calls, emails and messaging apps. But when it comes to ending a tenancy, not every message carries legal weight. Whether the notice arrives via SMS, WhatsApp or email, the law sets out specific requirements that must be met for a lease termination notice to be legally valid and enforceable. According to section 106(4) of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, the notice issued by the landlord must be in writing and signed by or on behalf of them.The notice should be served by post, delivered or handed over personally to the tenant or a family member/servant at the residence. If personal service is not feasible, the landlord must affix the notice on a part of the property from which it can be easily seen.However, even if the 1882 Act has not been amended to recognise electronic notices such as email, WhatsApp or SMS under Section 106, Indian courts have increasingly accepted electronic communication, particularly email, as a permissible mode of service in appropriate cases where the authenticity and delivery of the notice can be proved.In its decision on T.E. Thomson & Company Limited v. Swarnalata Chopra Nee Kapur, June 2025, the Calcutta high court noted that a notice sent by email was not invalid merely because it was electronic. However, the judgment did not decide that WhatsApp or SMS notices are always valid, or that there is a law in the country that gives such notices a legal basis.Generally, a casual text such as ‘vacate in three days’ would hardly have any legal validity and could violate the clauses mentioned in the rental agreement. Even in the absence of a written agreement, the Transfer of Property Act mandates a written and signed 15-day notice to be delivered to the tenant in case of residential tenancies.Text messages may serve as an additional mode of communication where the landlord can confirm that a legal notice has been sent to the tenant. In other words, a WhatsApp message or SMS alone is not a substitute for a legally compliant eviction notice. While courts are increasingly recognising electronic communication in certain circumstances, the validity of such notices depends on whether legal requirements have been met and whether their authenticity can be established. To avoid unnecessary disputes, landlords should follow the procedure laid down under the law, while tenants should not assume that every message asking them to vacate carries legal force.
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