wrong. As a renter you don't get to choose anything. The landlord is in charge. It owns the home. They set the rules. You accept the rules and you do whatever they tell them to do. That is why the renting class is lower than the owning class. Just packs of life. Get used to it or suck it upAnonymous wrote:The only way that would work is if the renters agreed and managed things for you.
Anonymous wrote:I have read reviews of basement AirBnBs and one common complaint is the noise made of whoever is living above. It's one thing if the owners are living above and can be mindful of the noise they are making, but you will have no control over renters living there. All of a sudden it's negative reviews and you won't get any takers for that Air Bn B. Not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:What about your liability? Say big house is being rented to a family with kids, you air bnb to a sexual predator who attacks one of the family members in the house. Next thing is you’re being sued.
Anonymous wrote:I have read reviews of basement AirBnBs and one common complaint is the noise made of whoever is living above. It's one thing if the owners are living above and can be mindful of the noise they are making, but you will have no control over renters living there. All of a sudden it's negative reviews and you won't get any takers for that Air Bn B. Not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:We have a similar setup inside the beltway and have thought about that when our youngest leaves for college. The potential income is tempting. Given that we have experienced the headaches of owning Airbnbs in other cities (more resort oriented), we decided we don’t want the hassle of short term rentals, but we are exploring the basement apartment as housing for traveling nurses. I believe it pays well and they stay for 4-12 weeks, and are obviously working, so not a ton of wear and tear on the home. We would have to make our basement a legal unit first. Definitely check out zoning and permitting first.