
You’re conducting your quarterly property inspection when you notice something that wasn’t there before: scratch marks on the hardwood floors, a lingering pet odor in the living room, and what looks suspiciously like dog hair on the couch. Your lease clearly states “No Pets Allowed,” but when you ask your tenant directly, they claim they’re “just pet-sitting for a friend.”
Two weeks later, your neighbor calls. “I see them walking a large dog every morning,” she reports. “It’s been going on for months, and it barks when they’re not home.”
Now you’re facing a dilemma that many Las Vegas landlords encounter: clear evidence of lease violations, a tenant who’s denying responsibility, and uncertainty about your legal options. Can you evict for unauthorized pets? What kind of proof do you need? And what happens if the tenant claims it’s a service animal?
The answers depend on understanding Nevada’s lease enforcement procedures, pet accommodation laws, and the evidence standards that actually hold up in court.
NOT LEGAL ADVICE: This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. Nevada landlord-tenant law and fair housing regulations are complex and evolving. For specific legal questions, consult with a Nevada-licensed attorney.
The straightforward answer: unauthorized pets are a clear lease violation in Nevada, and you can pursue eviction if your lease prohibits pets and you can prove they’re keeping them without permission.
However, success depends on having solid evidence, following proper legal procedures, and navigating the increasing complexity of service animal and emotional support animal laws.
Nevada Revised Statutes 40.2514 provides the legal framework for evicting tenants who violate lease terms, including pet restrictions. But the process requires specific evidence and notice procedures that many landlords get wrong.
Direct observation during legitimate property inspections
Photographic evidence of pets, pet supplies, or pet damage
Neighbor testimony with specific dates and descriptions
Veterinary records or pet registration found on property
Pet waste or litter boxes discovered during inspections
Property damage consistent with pet habitation (scratches, odors, stains)
Anonymous complaints without corroboration
Assumptions based on pet odors from neighboring units
Hearsay or “someone told me” reports
Circumstantial evidence alone (pet food bowls could belong to visitors)
Social media posts without clear property identification
Critical distinction: You need evidence that pets are living on the property, not just visiting occasionally. Nevada courts require proof of ongoing violation, not isolated incidents.
Before you serve any notices, you need to understand that not all animals in rental properties are “pets” under the law. Service animals and emotional support animals have federal protections that can override your lease restrictions.
Legal trap: If a tenant claims their unauthorized pet is a service or support animal after you discover it, you cannot automatically dismiss the claim. You must engage in the accommodation process, even if you suspect it’s a post-hoc justification.
Building a solid eviction case for unauthorized pets requires systematic documentation that will stand up in court:
Document every detail with photographs, including:
When neighbors report unauthorized pets, get specific details:
Document pet-related damage thoroughly:
Pro tip: Many landlords fail in court because they have “feelings” about unauthorized pets but lack concrete, documented evidence that would convince a judge.
Once you have solid evidence, Nevada law provides a specific process for evicting tenants who violate lease terms:
This notice must:
If pets remain after the three-day period:
File with the court if the tenant remains:
Common mistake: Landlords often serve vague notices like “tenant has unauthorized pets.” Nevada requires specific descriptions of the violation and evidence supporting it.
When tenants claim unauthorized pets are actually service or support animals, you cannot simply proceed with eviction. Federal law requires a specific accommodation process:
Important: Even if you suspect fraud, you must follow the accommodation process. Immediate rejection of accommodation requests can result in discrimination claims.
Unauthorized pets often cause significant property damage that exceeds normal wear and tear:
Financial reality: Pet damage often costs $2,000-8,000 to properly remediate, frequently exceeding typical security deposits.
The best unauthorized pet situation is the one that never happens. Smart landlords use comprehensive screening and clear policies:
Consider whether allowing pets with proper deposits and screening might be more profitable than constant enforcement battles.
Not every unauthorized pet situation needs to end in eviction. Sometimes education and accommodation create better outcomes:
Success story: A Las Vegas landlord discovered an unauthorized cat but worked with the tenant to complete a pet application, add a pet deposit, and establish care guidelines. The tenant has now been there three years with no problems, and the cat is well-cared for.
The Las Vegas rental market has specific factors that affect pet policy enforcement:
Professional property management transforms pet policy from ongoing headaches into systematic procedures:
Comprehensive Screening: Our tenant application process includes specific pet history questions and landlord verification that catches potential issues before lease signing.
Clear Policy Communication: We explain pet policies during lease signing, ensuring tenants understand restrictions, accommodation procedures, and consequences for violations.
Regular Inspection Programs: Systematic property inspections that document conditions and catch unauthorized pets early, when resolution is easier.
Legal Compliance Expertise: Our team understands service animal laws and accommodation procedures, reducing discrimination risks while protecting property rights.
Evidence Documentation: Professional inspection reports and photo documentation that meet court standards for enforcement actions.
Accommodation Management: We handle service animal and emotional support animal requests professionally, verifying legitimate needs while preventing fraud.
Damage Assessment: Established relationships with contractors and cleaning services who provide accurate estimates for pet-related damage.
Tenant Relations: Professional communication that often resolves pet issues through policy education rather than eviction proceedings.
Most importantly, tenants respect clear, consistently enforced policies administered by professionals rather than personal landlord-tenant conflicts over pet issues.
Pet accommodation laws continue evolving, and landlords need to stay current with changing requirements:
Property management companies track legal developments and adjust policies accordingly, while individual landlords often learn about changes only when problems arise.
Yes, you can evict tenants for unauthorized pets – if you have proper evidence, follow correct legal procedures, and navigate service animal accommodation laws correctly.
The real challenge isn’t knowing your rights; it’s building the evidence, managing the legal process, handling accommodation requests professionally, and balancing enforcement with tenant relations while protecting your property investment.
Smart property investors understand that pet policy enforcement requires systems, legal knowledge, and professional procedures that most individual landlords don’t have time to develop and maintain consistently.
At IRES, we handle pet policy enforcement as part of comprehensive property management. Our team knows the legal requirements, has systems for evidence gathering, and can navigate accommodation laws while protecting your property rights.
Ready to eliminate pet policy headaches through professional management? Contact IRES today for a free consultation on how systematic property management can protect your investment while ensuring legal compliance.
For complex situations involving service animal disputes or discrimination claims, we work with experienced Nevada attorneys who specialize in fair housing law and landlord-tenant regulations.