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§ 8.01-128.Verdict and judgment; damages.

Chapter 3. Actions · Article 13. Unlawful Entry and Detainer · Last amended 2026 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceSection 8.01-128 provides that a prevailing plaintiff in unlawful entry or detainer recovers the premises, proven damages, and owed rent, allows an alternative bifurcated procedure granting immediate possession with a later hearing on final rent and damages, and preserves any unclaimed damages or rent for separate action.

Full Text of § 8.01-128

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A. If it appears that the plaintiff was forcibly or unlawfully turned out of possession, or that it was unlawfully detained from him, the verdict or judgment shall be for the plaintiff for the premises, or such part thereof as may be found to have been so held or detained. The verdict or judgment shall also be for such damages as the plaintiff may prove to have been sustained by him by reason of such forcible or unlawful entry, or unlawful detention, of such premises, and such rent as he may prove to have been owing to him.
B. The plaintiff may, alternatively, receive a final, appealable judgment for possession of the property unlawfully entered or unlawfully detained and be issued an order of possession at the initial hearing on a summons for unlawful detainer, upon evidence presented by the plaintiff to the court. At the initial hearing, upon request of the plaintiff, the court shall bifurcate the unlawful detainer case and set a continuance date no later than 120 days from the date of the initial hearing to determine final rent and damages. If, however, at the initial hearing the defendant contests the amount of rent and damages alleged to be due and owing to the plaintiff, the court shall not bifurcate the case.
On such continuance date, the court shall permit amendment of the amount requested on the summons for unlawful detainer filed in court in accordance with the (i) notice of hearing to establish final rent and damages mailed to the last known address of the defendant and filed with the court at least 15 days prior to the continuance date as provided herein, (ii) evidence presented to the court, and (iii) amounts contracted for in the rental agreement. Nothing in this subsection shall preclude a defendant who appears in court at the initial court date from contesting an unlawful detainer action as otherwise provided by law.
If under this section an appeal is taken as to possession, the entire case shall be considered appealed. The plaintiff shall, in the instance of a continuance taken under this section, mail to the defendant at the defendant's last known address at least 15 days prior to the continuance date a notice advising (a) of the continuance date, (b) of the amounts of final rent and damages, and (c) that the plaintiff is seeking judgment for additional sums. A copy of such notice shall be filed with the court.
C. No verdict or judgment rendered under this section shall bar any separate concurrent or future action for any such damages or rent as may not be so claimed.

Plain-English Summary

Section 8.01-128 tells the court what a winning plaintiff gets. If the evidence shows the plaintiff was forcibly or unlawfully turned out of possession, or that possession was unlawfully detained, the verdict or judgment awards the plaintiff the premises — or whatever part of them was found to have been held or detained wrongfully — plus damages the plaintiff proves from the forcible or unlawful entry or detention, and rent the plaintiff proves was owed.

The section also offers a faster alternative. At the initial hearing, the plaintiff can get a final, appealable judgment for possession and an order of possession right away, based on the evidence presented. If the plaintiff asks, the court bifurcates the case, setting a continuance date no more than 120 days out to work out the final rent and damages — unless the defendant contests the amount of rent and damages at that initial hearing, in which case the court does not bifurcate. On the continuance date, the court allows the amount on the summons to be amended based on a notice of hearing mailed to the defendant’s last known address and filed with the court at least fifteen days before the continuance, the evidence presented, and the rental agreement’s terms; a defendant who showed up at the initial hearing keeps the right to contest the case as otherwise allowed by law. If the possession ruling gets appealed, the whole case is treated as appealed, not just the possession piece. The plaintiff has to mail the defendant notice, at least fifteen days before the continuance date, spelling out the date, the final rent and damages amounts, and the fact that the plaintiff is seeking additional judgment — and file a copy of that notice with the court.

Either way, a verdict or judgment under this section does not close the door on other claims. It does not bar a separate, concurrent, or future action for any damages or rent that were not claimed in this proceeding.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a plaintiff recover after winning an unlawful entry or detainer case?

The premises, or the part wrongfully held, plus any damages the plaintiff proves from the forcible or unlawful entry or detention, and any rent the plaintiff proves was owed.

Can I get possession of my property right away instead of waiting for rent and damages to be finalized?

Yes. At the initial hearing, the court can enter a final, appealable judgment for possession, and on your request, bifurcate the case with a continuance date up to 120 days out to determine final rent and damages.

What stops the court from bifurcating the case?

If the defendant contests the amount of rent and damages alleged at the initial hearing, the court does not bifurcate — the whole case proceeds together.

What notice does the defendant get before the continuance hearing on final rent and damages?

The plaintiff must mail the defendant, at least fifteen days before the continuance date, notice of the date, the final rent and damages figures, and that additional judgment is being sought, and file a copy of that notice with the court.

Does winning this judgment stop me from suing for rent or damages I did not claim?

No. Section 8.01-128(C) preserves any separate, concurrent, or future action for damages or rent not claimed in this verdict or judgment.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-793; 1954, c. 609; 1977, c. 617; 2005, c. 779; 2010, c. 550; 2011, c. 76; 2016, c. 281; 2017, c. 481; 2019, cc. 180, 700; 2026, c. 432.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Code of Virginia, published by the Code of Virginia, Virginia Division of Legislative Automated Systems. Last verified July 16, 2026. · Official source
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