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Updated about 9 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Laura Kyser
  • Winthrop, MA
10
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4
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Laundry

Laura Kyser
  • Winthrop, MA
Posted

I am a landlord who lives in one of the three units of the multi-family we own. The second floor unit has its own washer and dryer in the basement that the tenants own and pay the utilities on. Our unit also has a washer and dryer in the basement that we pay the utilities on. The third floor does not have a washer and a dryer. The machines are just regular machines, not coin-op.

My husband thinks that we should offer the use of our own washer and dryer one set day a week to the next third floor tenant, in order to attract a good tenant. Since we're expecting a baby in the next two weeks and plan to use cloth diapers (and I do all of the laundry), I really don't want to do that. Also, the washing machine is old and I don't want to push it.   (Tenants are so much harder on appliances than owners.) I'm wondering about others' experience - about how much in monthly rent do you think you can charge extra if laundry is on-site? Do quality tenants really skip over rentals without on-site laundry? Would it be the disaster I imagine if the tenant was allowed to do laundry in our machines, say on Mondays only? I've tried researching what other apartments offer in my town, but we're in a small suburb, so the sample of one bedroom rentals is really small.

Thanks for your insight!

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

4
Posts
10
Votes
Laura Kyser
  • Winthrop, MA
10
Votes |
4
Posts
Laura Kyser
  • Winthrop, MA
Replied
Originally posted by @George P.:

cloth diapers make people feel like they are doing something good for the environment.  but that's all they are doing.  good idea,  not practical at all.  

 It's also cheaper, and babies tend to potty train faster. 

Looking for landlording advice, not parenting advice :)

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