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Updated about 5 years ago on . Most recent reply

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61
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Julius Dixon
  • San Francisco, CA
4
Votes |
61
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How do you verify income on a property (rent rolls, leases?)

Julius Dixon
  • San Francisco, CA
Posted

Hey guys,

I'm reading a REI book and it is talking about verifying the income on a property before making a purchase. This seems obvious but how this is done more specifically and what prevents a seller from inflating numbers, and how can you independently verify current rent rates and occupancy? Is this a buyer beware type of situation, or are sellers contractually bound not to inflate their numbers?

Thanks,

Julius

Most Popular Reply

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Jeff Copeland
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Tampa Bay/St Petersburg, FL
2,065
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1,836
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Jeff Copeland
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Tampa Bay/St Petersburg, FL
Replied

It is commonplace to have each tenant sign an estoppel letter that basically states "I hereby certify that my lease is $X per month and expires on XX/XX/2017". 

The seller should provide this upon request and it should be part of your due diligence. At least that way you've double-checked with each tenant and confirmed that they acknowledge their lease terms. 

This also prevents a tenant from coming to you after closing during your first rent collection and saying "Hey, my rent is not $660, it's only $600" - This actually happened to me recently, and I was able to show them the estoppel letter they signed just a couple of weeks previously and say "Well, you just signed this last month acknowledging that your rent was $660, so $660 it is"...

The seller also can't provide an estoppel letter from a vacant unit (there's no tenant to sign it), so it should eliminate any confusion over occupancy rates.

  • Jeff Copeland

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