By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Landlord-Tenant Intake Forms: What Attorneys Need to Capture at First Contact

Landlord-tenant law moves fast. An eviction with a five-day response deadline does not wait for you to schedule a second consultation to gather the information you should have captured during the first call. A tenant walks in on a Thursday afternoon with a notice to quit dated the previous Monday, and your window to file an answer is closing before the weekend. If your intake did not capture the notice date, the type of tenancy, whether the property is rent-stabilized, and whether the landlord followed the correct service procedures, you are doing legal research blind while a clock runs.

The fundamental challenge of landlord-tenant intake is that every fact you need depends on a threshold question you must answer first: are you representing the landlord or the tenant? That single determination reshapes every section of your landlord-tenant intake form — the matter types change, the relevant defenses flip, the damages look different, and the urgency calculus reverses. Here is what a complete landlord-tenant intake should capture, and why each field matters.

Client role: the question that frames everything

Before you document anything else, you need to establish whether your client is the landlord or the tenant. This is not a formality. It determines the entire architecture of your intake.

A landlord seeking to evict a nonpaying tenant needs you to document the lease terms, the arrears, the notices served, and the proof of service. A tenant responding to that same eviction needs you to document the defenses available — habitability violations, retaliatory motive, improper notice, discriminatory intent. The same dispute generates two fundamentally different intake sessions, and a form that does not branch on this question will either miss critical landlord-side documentation or fail to surface tenant-side defenses.

Capture the client role first, then let it drive the rest of the intake. Everything below is organized by what both sides need, with callouts where the landlord and tenant tracks diverge.

Matter type: the scope of the dispute

Landlord-tenant law covers far more ground than evictions. Your intake form should present the full range of matter types so you can identify the correct legal framework from the start:

Many landlord-tenant matters involve overlapping categories. A tenant facing eviction for nonpayment may have withheld rent due to habitability violations and may also have a retaliation defense if the eviction followed a code enforcement complaint. Your intake should allow multiple selections, not force a single classification.

Property details: the facts that determine which laws apply

In landlord-tenant law, property characteristics are not just background information — they are jurisdictional triggers. The number of units in a building determines whether certain tenant protection statutes apply. Whether the property is rent-controlled changes the entire legal landscape. Your intake needs to capture:

For matters involving real property transactions rather than tenancy disputes — purchases, sales, or refinances — the intake requirements differ substantially. See our real estate intake form guide for what attorneys and agents need to capture in those contexts.

Lease terms: the contract that governs the relationship

The lease is the foundational document in every landlord-tenant matter. Whether your client has a fifty-page commercial lease or a handshake agreement with a month-to-month tenancy, your intake needs to document the terms that exist:

Eviction-specific intake: the facts that win or lose the case

Eviction cases live and die on procedural compliance and factual specifics. The intake fields diverge sharply depending on which side you represent.

For landlords initiating an eviction:

For tenants defending an eviction:

Habitability issues: documenting the conditions

Habitability claims require detailed factual documentation at intake. A tenant who says "the apartment has problems" needs to be walked through a structured inventory of conditions:

Security deposit disputes: the numbers and the deadlines

Security deposit disputes are among the most common landlord-tenant matters, and they are driven almost entirely by documented facts and statutory deadlines:

Damages and relief sought

The final section of your intake should capture what the client is seeking and what exposure exists. Landlord-tenant damages are statutory in many cases, which means the relief available may exceed what the client initially expects:

Why structured intake changes outcomes

Landlord-tenant law is deceptively procedural. The substantive merits of a case — whether the tenant owes rent, whether the landlord maintained the property, whether the eviction is retaliatory — are often secondary to whether the right notice was served in the right way within the right timeframe. An intake form that captures notice dates, service methods, response deadlines, and unit counts is not collecting administrative data. It is identifying the procedural facts that will determine whether you can win on the merits at all.

A landlord client who tells you they served a three-day notice when the statute requires thirty days for a month-to-month termination has just told you their case is defective before it starts. A tenant client who tells you they received a notice eight days ago in a jurisdiction with a five-day answer period has just told you that your first motion is for relief from default. Neither of those facts surfaces if your intake form only asks for a name, an address, and a general description of the problem.

If your practice includes real property transactions alongside tenancy disputes, see our real estate intake form guide for what to capture on purchase, sale, and refinance matters — the property details overlap, but the legal issues diverge entirely.

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Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Client role, matter type, property details, lease terms, eviction specifics, habitability conditions, security deposit tracking, and damages. Built for landlord-tenant attorneys.

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