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State-by-State Eviction Law Updates: Oklahoma, Vermont, and Key Changes

2 min readUpdated Jun 2026

Property managers dodged regulatory bullets in two key states this year. While eviction law changes 2026 may still be coming, failed legislation in Oklahoma and Vermont means current procedures stay in place. We see this as breathing room for professional property managers to prepare for future changes.

Vermont's Legislative Stalemate

Vermont's landlord-tenant reform bill collapsed in a surprise Senate tiebreaker vote. The bill would have changed eviction timelines and notice requirements. Property managers in Vermont can continue using current procedures without scrambling to adapt to new rules.

This gives Vermont property managers time to build stronger systems. Professional property managers who document everything and follow current law precisely will be ready when changes eventually come. The delay rewards managers who already operate professionally.

Oklahoma Reform Bills Defeated

Oklahoma's eviction reform legislation failed during the legislative session, with advocates blaming election year politics. The proposed changes would have extended notice periods and modified court procedures.

Oklahoma property managers keep their current eviction processes. This stability lets professional managers focus on what matters most: providing excellent service that justifies fair compensation. When you follow proper procedures consistently, eviction law changes become manageable updates rather than business disruptions.

What This Means for Professional Property Managers

These legislative defeats show that property management professionalization is moving faster than regulation. Smart property managers are already exceeding minimum legal requirements. They document everything, communicate clearly with tenants, and follow proper security deposit procedures.

The managers who struggle with regulatory changes are usually the ones cutting corners already. Professional property managers welcome clear rules because good systems beat good intentions every time.

Preparing for Future Changes

Use this breathing room wisely. Review your current eviction procedures in both states. Make sure your documentation meets professional standards now, before new laws demand it. Property managers who track every interaction and follow written procedures will adapt quickly to any eviction law changes 2026 might bring.

Build relationships with local legal counsel. Understand your current compliance requirements completely. When regulations do change, professional property managers with solid systems will gain market share from competitors who scramble to catch up.

The property management industry is professionalizing. These regulatory delays give the best managers more time to pull ahead of the pack.

KG
Keenan GeorgeFounder, Leads for PMs

15 years managing property. Over 1,000 doors under management. Now we help PM companies get the leads they deserve through Google Ads that actually convert.

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