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Updated almost 6 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Thomas Stanley
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Boston, MA
2
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15
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Holding Security Deposits for RI Multi Family

Thomas Stanley
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Boston, MA
Posted

Morning BP,

I’m excited to say that I am approaching my first closing for a multi family property in Rhode Island.

Its been a long road with lots of ‘cleaning my truck’ exercises along the way but here I am. Pretty excited and a tinge of nerves all at the same time

Looking for any advice from those with experience:

How do you handle security deposit funds? I believe this varies state by state and was wondering if I need a proper escrow account with a bank, w-9s from tenants etc. or if I can just open a savings account and hold security deposits there.

Thanks,

Tom

Most Popular Reply

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1,456
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1,400
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Anthony Thompson
  • Buy and Hold Investor
  • Cranston, RI
1,400
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1,456
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Anthony Thompson
  • Buy and Hold Investor
  • Cranston, RI
Replied

@Thomas Stanley I second the recommendation to keep the security deposits in a separate account, if only to keep your bookkeeping and record keeping easier.

Also, this is an unlikely/slim chance, but if you were ever asked about, in eviction court, how you handled the security deposits, I think it's a mark of professionalism to have kept them in a separate account. It shows that you treated them separately, not mixing them with "your" operating funds but treating them as the tenants' funds (which they are) and putting them aside.

I haven't found a newer edition of the RI Landlord-Tenant Handbook than the 2007 one, though I do keep looking. There have been a number of minor tweaks/changes over the years since that time, so it's probably overdue for an update, but as always, what budget will that project come out of...

That Handbook is basically a friendly / human-readable version of the laws themselves, which are obviously the most up to date, if a little terse. But if you do have a question or something is unclear from the Handbook I'd recommend going directly to the source, the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act statutes.

It will probably be more accessible than you expect, though it's really just a starting point for a discussion with an attorney if there are any questions remaining. And you should probably build a relationship with an attorney familiar with RI evictions, if you're going to own a multi in RI anyway :)

  • Anthony Thompson
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