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Feedback From Clients and Colleagues
“I endorse this lawyer. I have personally worked with Mr. Eller on several matters. He is professional, cares about his clients and does a first class job.”
Relationship: Supervised lawyer
“I endorse this lawyer’s work. [Travis Scott Eller] worked for my firm and was a thoughtful and thorough attorney. He sincerely cares about his clients and protecting their interests” and “has experience in many different litigated settings and also knows how to work toward amicable and practical resolutions.”
I am a Travis’s client, and have used his services several times. He has been really clear about what the steps are in terms what I need to do and what he does. That helps me a lot for going through the difficult eviction process successfully.
“Mr. Eller helped us with evicting difficult tenants. There were multiple issues with tenants like property damage, not paying rent, claiming medical issues due to property etc….I highly recommend Mr. Eller and will definitely use their services in future.”
“Travis resolved a tenant dispute over the course of a year. His patient guidance and subject matter expertise was instrumental in the case resolving justly. I am grateful for his services and sage advise.”
Even a small hyper-technical error can mean starting over. Consult with a lawyer first.
While commercial landlord-tenant law has not seen the overhaul that residential landlord-tenant law has, the legal/political climate has changed, and some local laws impact commercial cases as well. We regularly handle commercial landlord-tenant disputes.
We represent both commercial tenants and landlords throughout the Puget Sound area.
This typically applies where friends or family reside in the owner's property free of rent obligations.
Our practice also includes commercial landlord‑tenant disputes, representing businesses on both sides of the lease when conflicts arise.
Washington Landlord-Tenant Attorney
At Eller Law Firm PLLC, attorney Travis Scott Eller Washington focuses on Washington landlord‑tenant law, helping landlords navigate an increasingly complex and evolving legal landscape.
For more than two decades, he has seen every shift in landlord-tenant law and is in the trenches every day. He has successfully litigated landlord-tenant and eviction cases through every phase and facet: representing commercial and residential landlords in evictions; defending landlords against claims and lawsuits; litigating through civil trials, arbitations, and appeals.
Mr. Eller presents frequently at bar-approved continuing legal education seminars on landlord-tenant law. He has spoken on landlord-tenant law for landlord industry groups and for the King County Law Library and authored works on landlord-tenant law available at the King County Law Library and the Pierce County Law Library. He scored in the 96th percentile on the Law School Admissions Test, was invited to apply by his law school of choice, was awarded a merit-based scholarship, and later earned the National Institute for Trial Advocacy's "Advocate" designation.
Recent Speaking Engagements
• 2026 Landlord Tenant Law Updates CLE (WSBA, May 27, 2026)
• Residential Evictions CLE (The Seminar Group, April 2026)
• Landlord‑Tenant Q&A Session (King County Law Library, March 2026)
• Residential Evictions CLE (The Seminar Group, March 2025)
• Landlord‑Tenant Q&A Session (King County Law Library, June 2025)
• Washington Landlord‑Tenant Law 2024 CLE — Presenter (National Business Institute, October 2024)
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Landlord-Tenant Law FAQs
A court rule issued by the Washington Supreme Court continues the first hearing in eviction cases. The rationale of this Supreme Court rule is to foster the tenant’s right to an attorney at no cost.
This is very frustrating for landlords, as they are not being paid rent and the process seems to drag on forever, but this Supreme Court rule is binding on local courts.
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No, not exactly.
A statutory repayment plan is required as the first step in a residential nonpayment eviction if any of the past-due rent accrued through April 2023 (regardless of whether the notice was served after April 2023).
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Yes, the language matters and the court may dismiss your eviction case on procedural grounds–no matter how deserving on the merits–if the language is wrong.
Some documents, such as the 14-day notice, must be in the exact verbiage required by statute. In some local jurisdictions additional specific language must be in the notice and/or additional documents must be served with it.
There are some multi-state websites that show up in Google results with form generators that create notice forms that will not hold up in Washington courts. We do not post forms for every situation or jurisdiction because the new laws vary and are not simple to implement. Consult with an attorney before serving documents.
Proper service of an eviction notice (pay rent or vacate, or etc.) requires someone to go to the rental property and knock on the door. While there are detailed instructions on serving eviction notices on this website, it is far wiser to have an attorney advise and assist with every step in the process.
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It makes no difference whether the agreement was reduced to writing, or was only an oral agreement. If someone is paying you (or is supposed to pay you) to live in your property, you are a landlord and they are a tenant. All the eviction and landlord-tenant laws apply.
Ironically, in some situations it may be faster to evict a tenant than someone who lives in your property without an obligation to pay.
I am in desperate need of an attorney
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Call 206-801-1188
or Click the Contact Us Button
FAQs About Our Law Firm
A court rule issued by the Washington Supreme Court continues the first hearing in eviction cases. The rationale of this Supreme Court rule is to foster the tenant’s right to an attorney at no cost.
This is very frustrating for landlords, as they are not being paid rent and the process seems to drag on forever, but this Supreme Court rule is binding on local courts.
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
No, not exactly.
A statutory repayment plan is required as the first step in a residential nonpayment eviction if any of the past-due rent accrued through April 2023 (regardless of whether the notice was served after April 2023).
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Yes, the language matters and the court may dismiss your eviction case on procedural grounds–no matter how deserving on the merits–if the language is wrong.
Some documents, such as the 14-day notice, must be in the exact verbiage required by statute. In some local jurisdictions additional specific language must be in the notice and/or additional documents must be served with it.
There are some multi-state websites that show up in Google results with form generators that create notice forms that will not hold up in Washington courts. We do not post forms for every situation or jurisdiction because the new laws vary and are not simple to implement. Consult with an attorney before serving documents.
Proper service of an eviction notice (pay rent or vacate, or etc.) requires someone to go to the rental property and knock on the door. While there are detailed instructions on serving eviction notices on this website, it is far wiser to have an attorney advise and assist with every step in the process.
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
It makes no difference whether the agreement was reduced to writing, or was only an oral agreement. If someone is paying you (or is supposed to pay you) to live in your property, you are a landlord and they are a tenant. All the eviction and landlord-tenant laws apply.
Ironically, in some situations it may be faster to evict a tenant than someone who lives in your property without an obligation to pay.
I am in desperate need of an attorney
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
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