Does the lessee who subleases the house to a third party have to send a written notice to the lessor?
Pursuant to Article 475 Civil Code 2015 The lessee has the right to sublease the house he has rented to a third party if the lessor agrees.
As for the need to notify the lessor, Article 132 Housing Law 2014 has the following provisions:
Unilateral termination of housing lease contract
1. During the house rental term as agreed in the contract, the lessor is not allowed to unilaterally terminate the house lease contract and recover the house being rented, except for the cases specified in Clause 2 of this Article.
2. The lessor has the right to unilaterally terminate the rental contract and recover the rented house in one of the following cases:
a) The lessor of state-owned housing or social housing leases it without authority, to the wrong subjects, or to the wrong conditions as prescribed in this Law;
b) The lessee does not pay the agreed rent for 3 months or more without a legitimate reason;
c) The lessee does not use the house for the right purpose as agreed in the contract;
d) The lessee arbitrarily destroys, expands, renovates, or demolishes the rented house;
d) The lessee converts, lends, or sublets the currently rented house without the consent of the lessor;
e) The lessee disrupts order and environmental hygiene, seriously affecting the lives of surrounding people who have been approved by the lessor or the head of the residential group, village, hamlet, hamlet or hamlet. , phum, soc made a record for the third time but still did not fix it;
g) Falling into the cases specified in Clause 2, Article 129 of this Law.
...
According to regulations, the lessee has the right to sublease the property he has rented, if the lessor agrees.
It is not necessary for the lessee to notify the lessor in writing, as long as the lessor knows and agrees.