Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in MoCo - so the companies are different - but I kept the water bill in our names instead of the tenant the first two years we rented out due to an excess of caution - an unpaid water bill can become a lien on the house, and an excessively large water bill can indicate a big problem. We had just experienced this at our primary residence when the main water line sprung a leak between the street and the house (our responsibility) and we first found out because the normally $200 quarterly bill was $1800. Now I have the tenants pay, but some things to think about for you.
My husband said exactly this - keeping it in our name we will have an early detection of a leak. Why did you switch it to having the tenants pay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in MoCo - so the companies are different - but I kept the water bill in our names instead of the tenant the first two years we rented out due to an excess of caution - an unpaid water bill can become a lien on the house, and an excessively large water bill can indicate a big problem. We had just experienced this at our primary residence when the main water line sprung a leak between the street and the house (our responsibility) and we first found out because the normally $200 quarterly bill was $1800. Now I have the tenants pay, but some things to think about for you.
My husband said exactly this - keeping it in our name we will have an early detection of a leak. Why did you switch it to having the tenants pay?
Anonymous wrote:I’m in MoCo - so the companies are different - but I kept the water bill in our names instead of the tenant the first two years we rented out due to an excess of caution - an unpaid water bill can become a lien on the house, and an excessively large water bill can indicate a big problem. We had just experienced this at our primary residence when the main water line sprung a leak between the street and the house (our responsibility) and we first found out because the normally $200 quarterly bill was $1800. Now I have the tenants pay, but some things to think about for you.