Dawn Brandt
Pet Policy Violated / Beyond Normal Wear and Tear
15 February 2017 | 11 replies
There are no pets allowed on the premises.
Beau Pearson
First, Last and Security is a lot of money??
25 December 2017 | 17 replies
We have a rental in Southwest Florida that rents for 2800mo.. we require first month, security deposit, last month, non refundable pet deposit, all by lease signing.
John McKinnon
The first investment, how do you transition existing tenants?
8 January 2019 | 14 replies
Late charges, pet charges, etc...
Account Closed
Parents/landlord trying to kick out me and my boyfriend.
2 June 2019 | 13 replies
She also lied about her two pets being service dogs when she moved in (I paid for my small weiner dog).
Simon Obas
Haven’t met my new tenants
27 August 2019 | 19 replies
At each meeting we:- Spent a few minutes getting to know them - Walked the apartment- Checked the toilets for leaks (I pay water)- Asked how they liked their neighbors- Asked if there were any current issues with the apartment - Discussed our non-negotiables: take care of the apartment, no smoking, no pets, and pay rent on time (those in leases were already bound to these items)- Explained our process for maintenance requests and our hours of operation - Explained their options for paying rent (Cozy or mailed check)We then followed up each meeting with an email containing a summary of what we discussed and any follow-up items (maintenance).
Jane S.
Why is my rental still available? Read on …
12 September 2021 | 8 replies
So I would have to be a policeman to monitor if he took the dogs back after moving in and not paying the pet fees.
Ben Jennings
Of Market Deals- how to generate leads
23 May 2022 | 11 replies
But know this, I am TRYING to help you and all of you by being straight to the point and blunt.When you know what true lead generation looks like, you too would realize that the agent route is not the way to go.That said, by all means make solid connections with agents, I have one pet agent too.
Tom R.
legal forms for rental property
17 September 2017 | 4 replies
For example, even if I happily allow pets (example) the main lease would state no pets allowed and the consequences, etc, however if the Tenant has a pet and you want to allow a pet, all you would have to do is attach the pet amendment allowing pets, same with utilities. - This way you don't have to constantly keep changing your lease wording... as it can get pretty confusing pretty quick when you start getting multiple properties with different tenants some with pets, some without, some properties you cover utilities, some you don't ........and then you have multiple versions of your lease out there - hard to keep track of that way. --- Pet Amendment (addressing # of pets, size, breed, pet fee, that the tenant is responsible for pets behavior, what happens when there is an incident, etc.) --- Utility Amendment (How utilities will be addressed, who pays, in whos' name, etc.)5.
Paul Ewing
Snakes why do there always have to be snakes?
17 March 2018 | 1 reply
What are people's experiences with tenants keeping snakes for pets?
Cassidy Burns
Would you decrease monthly rent in order to keep a great tenant?
9 April 2018 | 11 replies
Good Morning BP,I have a wonderful tenant who has been with me for 8 months now and just reached out to me yesterday that she has to move May 1 as the rent is a littler higher than she would like to be paying ($625 + 2x$25/pet Fee= $675 total)The particular unit was a BRRR and has had a lot of very nice updates, I have refinanced, pulled all of my initial investment out, and is now INF% Cash on Cash and still has 30% Equity and is cash flowing $200/month after all PITI, expenses, cap expenditures, property management, etc.The Question is, do I offer to reduce the rent to maybe $625/month in order to keep the tenant for a longer term lease?