How NoticePath works

NoticePath is built for people who need a fast process baseline without fake certainty. It separates statute-backed notice timing from court-stage estimates, shows visible as-of dates for regulatory values, and keeps rule data in an editable layer so the calculator logic does not have to change every time a state updates a number or local court behavior shifts.

The rule records in NoticePath store notice type, notice days, cure assumptions, filing triggers, estimate bands, source URLs, and as-of dates. The logic layer simply reads those records and assembles a timeline. That design is intentional. It means the product can survive changes over time because the data changes without forcing a rewrite of the underlying calculation flow.

NoticePath also lowers confidence when a statewide baseline is likely to be overridden by local city or county rules. That is especially important in places where rent control, just-cause protections, local courts, or filing practice can change the path. Instead of hiding that complexity, the product surfaces it early and points users to the official authority that should be checked next.

Every result is informational only. It is meant to help a landlord, tenant, or advisor frame the baseline sequence and organize questions before they rely on a timeline. It is not legal advice, and it is not a substitute for local counsel or official court instructions. That limitation is part of the value proposition, not an afterthought. If the baseline is weak, the tool should say so clearly.