
8 April 2017 | 3 replies
They can possibly get water back up on their own policy as well, but this would just be for the personal property rather than fixing damage to the home.Personal Property coverage is normally 70% of dwelling if you feel like this is overkill, potentially you can ask for an override to lower the coverage.

6 April 2017 | 11 replies
If you rent out a 1-bedroom apartment to a student there's a single point of contact, one person's security deposit if there's damage, one person to evict if things go really wrong, etc.

6 April 2017 | 17 replies
There is a risk with a tank but if you get it at the right price you can make up for most damage caused by the leaking.

13 April 2017 | 23 replies
In that time, determine if the tenant caused any damage to the property or if you lost rent because of his breach.

7 April 2017 | 9 replies
Would they be responsible for the damages?

21 April 2017 | 36 replies
tileyou can put it in and it lasts and lastsnever worry about stains, water damage, or some vinyl crap that is not quality- under 5 a foot-they are renting space- if they want floor coverings then let them buy throw rugs- if your worried on getting it rented with no floor coverings then go stage it with some throw rugs, let the tenant know that your rugs are your rugsenjoy

11 April 2017 | 4 replies
She gets her money when you have completed your inspection, assuming no damage, and she hands over the keys.

8 April 2017 | 7 replies
A lot of damage can take place in only 3 months from a leaking water line or drain.

7 April 2017 | 2 replies
One of the most important things with a fire damaged house is acquiring the city Fire report.

13 April 2017 | 20 replies
There have been minor leakage issues in the past and some minor weather damage issues as well that I can probably leverage off of to bolster the case for expense characterization.