Anonymous wrote:As a long time renter our big red flag is landlord. We only rent places with a management company. We rent SFH in the 5-7k range for multiple years (currently in rental for 5 years). We will not deal with a landlord directly. We have in the past and they lead to problems due to their feelings rather than referring to the contract they signed.
Anonymous wrote:Find a middleman, a rental agency. Big real estate companies (the ones you've heard of) often have a rental side.
These rental real estate employees manage rental properties.
They market your rental property, show the property, do due diligence on a potential renter (credit checks, etc.), handle all contracts and paperwork, and once an upstanding tenant is living there the rental agency side serves as the renter's contact for any issues. You never have to deal with the renter directly.
The rental agency also contacts you in case of any repairs to let you know what needs to be done, the contractor they will call, and the amount of the repair. You get final say. They deduct the repairs from your next rent check. You receive a copy of the repair statement for your records.
The rental agency deducts a small percentage from your monthly rent check (they also collect the rent from the renter for you) as their payment.
They also handle contract re-upping. If renter moves out, they put up the "for rent" sign and get about re-renting the place. They show it, market it, contract it, rent it. With your approval as owner, of course.
Going this route takes all the headache away. All you have to do is say yes or no. Highly recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Find a middleman, a rental agency. Big real estate companies (the ones you've heard of) often have a rental side.
These rental real estate employees manage rental properties.
They market your rental property, show the property, do due diligence on a potential renter (credit checks, etc.), handle all contracts and paperwork, and once an upstanding tenant is living there the rental agency side serves as the renter's contact for any issues. You never have to deal with the renter directly.
The rental agency also contacts you in case of any repairs to let you know what needs to be done, the contractor they will call, and the amount of the repair. You get final say. They deduct the repairs from your next rent check. You receive a copy of the repair statement for your records.
The rental agency deducts a small percentage from your monthly rent check (they also collect the rent from the renter for you) as their payment.
They also handle contract re-upping. If renter moves out, they put up the "for rent" sign and get about re-renting the place. They show it, market it, contract it, rent it. With your approval as owner, of course.
Going this route takes all the headache away. All you have to do is say yes or no. Highly recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Your number one priority as a landlord is to provide safe housing.
It’s incredibly REWARDING but it is far from passive, hands-off work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Picking tenants is tricky, some things I look for as red flags that often cause me to ghost them
Too nice of a car (if you’re renting with a 60k plus car)
More kids than adults esp teens
Single moms
More than one pet
Any public assistance
History of multiple 1 year only rentals
Stay at home spouses
Lol
We meet a few of these criteria and have perfect credit and make more than $400,000 a year. We’ve primarily rented for more than 20 years. You’re both judgmental and ignorant.