Massachusetts eviction & housing resources

One place to find the official links that actually matter

This page pulls together key Massachusetts eviction and housing resources we see landlords, attorneys, and property managers use all the time. It is not legal advice and it is not a complete list, but it is a practical starting point.

Official sources first When there is a Mass.gov page, Housing Court guide, or Attorney General resource, we send you there before anything else.
We keep our lane narrow We can explain where our work fits, but strategy, defenses, and legal opinions have to come from a Massachusetts attorney, not from us.

Eviction overview: official guides

These are good “first stop” links when you need to understand the basic eviction process before you decide what to do next.

Mass.gov

General eviction resources

These pages outline legal reasons for eviction, basic steps in the process, and links out to additional help.

For landlords

Eviction process from the owner side

These links explain how to file, what the court expects, and common issues that come up when owners move forward.

For tenants

Tenant focused eviction guides

Even if you are a landlord or attorney, it helps to know what tenants are being told about their rights and options.

Rental assistance and RAFT

Many nonpayment cases now involve some attempt at rental assistance. Programs change, but RAFT is still a key tool in Massachusetts for preventing homelessness and stabilizing tenancies.

RAFT basics

Residential Assistance for Families in Transition (RAFT)

RAFT is a state program that can help cover back rent and certain housing costs for eligible households. Benefit limits and rules are updated from time to time, so always check the current Mass.gov guidance and any recent administrative plans before relying on older information.

Why this matters to evictions

How RAFT intersects with nonpayment cases

In practice, we see RAFT in two ways:

We do not decide whether anyone qualifies, and we do not handle applications. Our role is to serve the paperwork the court requires and document what happened at each step.

Practical tip

If RAFT or other assistance is in play, tell your attorney and your constable up front. It can affect scheduling, how you talk about the case in court, and whether it makes sense to push forward with an execution right away.

Housing Court rules, standing orders, and FAQs

Housing Court practice is driven by rules, local standing orders, and administrative decisions that change over time. These links are where we check for current requirements.

Standing orders

Housing Court standing orders

These orders cover things like Tier 1 events, scheduling, and how summary process cases move through the system.

Electronic filing

Mandatory e-filing for attorneys

Attorneys handling summary process, small claims, and some civil matters in Housing Court should stay current on mandatory e-filing requirements.

FAQ & resources

Housing Court resources and FAQ

Good starting points for contact information, mediation programs, and practical details for each division.

Required forms and notices

There are specific forms Massachusetts requires in certain eviction situations. We do not create or approve these forms, but we expect to see them when we are hired to serve the underlying paperwork.

Notice to Quit (nonpayment)

“Form to Accompany Residential Notice to Quit”

In residential nonpayment cases, landlords are required to give this form along with the Notice to Quit. When we are asked to serve a nonpayment notice, we look for this form in the packet and flag it if it is missing.

More tenant and landlord info

Additional state level resources

These links point to legal services, community mediation, and additional guidance that courts and agencies direct parties to.

Our role with forms and notices

We do not decide which form you should use, how it should be filled out, or whether it is legally sufficient. That belongs to you and your attorney. Our job is to serve whatever the court and your counsel decide to use, document how it was served, and tell you honestly if something at the door does not line up with what the paperwork assumes.

Neutral help and legal services

Whether you are a landlord or a tenant, there are neutral programs in Massachusetts that focus on keeping people housed where possible and making the court process more understandable.

Legal help and mediation

Programs around the state

These programs are available to both landlords and tenants in many situations and can sometimes resolve disputes before or during a case.

Attorney General

AG’s guide and hotline

The Attorney General publishes a detailed guide to landlord and tenant rights in Massachusetts and maintains a consumer hotline for certain types of complaints and questions.

Our own checklists and explainer articles

We write internal checklists and public blog posts to help clients understand the constable’s part of the process. They never replace a lawyer, but they do make the timeline less mysterious.

From MACivilProcess.com

Constable side explanations

On this site, look for:

These pages explain in plain English what happens when you hire us, how we schedule attempts, and what to expect on 48 hour and execution days.

From maconstable.com

Deeper dives and training style content

Our main site, maconstable.com, hosts more in depth pieces about constables in Massachusetts, eviction procedure, and required forms.

If you want background beyond “what do I do next in this case,” that is the place to wander. When you are ready to actually serve documents, come back here and use the forms on MACivilProcess.com.

Have paperwork already and need it served
Use these resources to understand the process, then send us the documents and deadlines. We will tell you what we can do, what it will cost, and what a realistic timeline looks like.