
24 March 2022 | 10 replies
Lots of fees can be easily built into a management agreement, such as 1 month's rent for finding a tenant, setting up an online portal fee $150 for both you and the tenant, manager taking half of a non refundable pet deposit $300, $7 online rent payment fee, the list is as long as the manager is creative.Work on the relationship, and as the relationship gets better and longer, you should have a guy who has your best interests at heart, although not a requirement.

25 December 2021 | 4 replies
Also check social media FB etc. guy says he has no pets and there is a pic of him wth a dog!

2 November 2022 | 10 replies
This is particularly common in two situations: pets and parking.With regard to animals, pet rent is usually charged based on the size and/or weight of the animal.

22 September 2022 | 9 replies
Think of all the things that could go wrong and see if the lease addresses them: unauthorized pets or tenants, early termination, security deposit, lease violations, late rent, eviction, lawn maintenance, parking, etc.5.

14 February 2022 | 3 replies
Does anyone know of any good rental properties in Denver for about 3 months and allows pets ?

7 February 2015 | 7 replies
$200 pet fee, $25 per month per pet.

9 February 2015 | 4 replies
But the house just happens to be next door to another that I already own, and it's not in bad shape, other than the pet odor issue.

19 February 2015 | 7 replies
They're lease was ending February 1st so we gave them the option of $300 pet deposit + $25/mo rent increase or get rid of the dogs or move.

1 April 2016 | 34 replies
In other words, I think some people believe there is some sort of cachet associated with using the term in that way...In terms of just pure incorrect spelling, my top pet peeve spot goes to people who use "loose" when they mean "lose"...until the Internet, I never realized this was a common mistake...

20 January 2015 | 34 replies
Even if you are believer in "training" tenants (a phrase and mode of thinking I personally find incredibly offensive when applied to adult citizens, rather than children or pets), recognize that this tenant is past the "training" stage, as she will soon be past the "tenant" phase!