Serve written notice to pay or quit
Landlord must deliver a written 5-day notice demanding rent or possession. Service must comply with Wisconsin statute.
Uncontested: 21–45 days · Contested: 45–120 days · Under Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant)
The Wisconsin eviction process requires a court-ordered judgment before a landlord can remove a tenant. Timeline figures below begin after the pre-filing notice period expires and the landlord files the complaint with the court. Add 3–60+ days for the applicable pre-filing notice period (pay-or-quit, cure-or-quit, or no-fault) depending on the eviction reason.
| Uncontested eviction (after filing) | 21–45 days | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
| Contested eviction (after filing) | 45–120 days | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
| Pre-filing notice: Non-payment of rent | 5 days | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
| Pre-filing notice: Lease violation / cure | 14 days | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
| Pre-filing notice: End of term / no-cause | 30 days | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
| Court filing fee | $95–$175 | Wis. Stat. § 704 (Landlord and Tenant) |
Landlord must deliver a written 5-day notice demanding rent or possession. Service must comply with Wisconsin statute.
If tenant has not paid or vacated after the notice period, landlord files in the appropriate local court and pays the filing fee.
The court issues a summons; a process server or sheriff must personally serve the tenant. Service rules vary by county.
Tenant typically has a short window to file a written answer. If no answer is filed, landlord may obtain default judgment. Contested cases are set for a trial date.
Upon judgment for the landlord, the court issues a writ of possession. The sheriff or constable posts and then executes the lockout; only law enforcement may physically remove the tenant.
Informational only, not legal advice. Consult a licensed Wisconsin attorney. Source attribution in the Sources band below.