Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.
90 days notice is required for that, and cannot be rented for a 12-month period beginning on the date the housing provider recovered possession of the rental unit. If they do not actually move in the tenant can seek damages.
Couldn’t OP just notify them that rent is going up by 50% or something? They’re unlikely to stay if rent is so much higher than market rate.
You can do a reasonable rent increase but you can’t try to evict them or retaliate against them thru a rent increase
Anonymous wrote:Don't these laws intimidate would-be landlords and increase the number of vacant spaces that are just sitting around in DC, when we have shortage of units?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.
90 days notice is required for that, and cannot be rented for a 12-month period beginning on the date the housing provider recovered possession of the rental unit. If they do not actually move in the tenant can seek damages.
Couldn’t OP just notify them that rent is going up by 50% or something? They’re unlikely to stay if rent is so much higher than market rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.
90 days notice is required for that, and cannot be rented for a 12-month period beginning on the date the housing provider recovered possession of the rental unit. If they do not actually move in the tenant can seek damages.
Couldn’t OP just notify them that rent is going up by 50% or something? They’re unlikely to stay if rent is so much higher than market rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.
90 days notice is required for that, and cannot be rented for a 12-month period beginning on the date the housing provider recovered possession of the rental unit. If they do not actually move in the tenant can seek damages.
Anonymous wrote:What you read in the previous thread is true.
In D.C., once the lease period ends, the lease automatically goes month-to-month. All the other parts of the lease remain the same (including the rent amount, unless you give the tenant proper written notice of a rent increase).
If you really don't like them cash for keys may be in your future.
Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.
Anonymous wrote:I would say we intend to move into the house and don’t.