Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the responses. The family told me upfront that their house is foreclosed. It shows up on the credit checks. I have such a good connection with the wife and want to see if I should give people a chance to get back on track. She seems like a solid person. However, the credit check reveals that the house's mortgage is similar to the rent (excluding tax and insurance) I am asking for my rental. Red flag?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the responses. The family told me upfront that their house is foreclosed. It shows up on the credit checks. I have such a good connection with the wife and want to see if I should give people a chance to get back on track. She seems like a solid person. However, the credit check reveals that the house's mortgage is similar to the rent (excluding tax and insurance) I am asking for my rental. Red flag?
Anonymous wrote:I skipped the credit check for my current tenants. I had spoken to them so many times and really felt like it was unnecessary. I had them fill out the form and agree to pay for it but never ran it. They were clearly very willing to do it and I just felt like it was a waste.
I asked for employment letters and saw that the wife was a dr at a local hospital and the husband had a good job at a large company with a very good salary.
They were just very solid people. I think I would have rented to them if they had a foreclosure. They just kept telling me how much they wanted the place, didn't nickel and dime the rent or security and emphasized they would take care of the house as if it were their own home, They called to tell me about themselves and their family and that was worth more than a credit check. Those have errors too so nothing is 100%.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the responses. The family told me upfront that their house is foreclosed. It shows up on the credit checks. I have such a good connection with the wife and want to see if I should give people a chance to get back on track. She seems like a solid person. However, the credit check reveals that the house's mortgage is similar to the rent (excluding tax and insurance) I am asking for my rental. Red flag?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people foreclose on a house for different reasons. My mom foreclosed on a house, Detroit-area though, but always paid her mortgage on time. She had gotten ripped off by a contractor and she didn't have the money to re-do the repairs. Had to let the house go. Anyway, some people foreclose for different reasons.
Still not a good history , except she blames others
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Everyone I know who has a horror story has skipped several steps in the "due diligence" process of picking tenants. I swear I don't even need to run a background check anymore, I've done this so much. Do they show up at the open house during the advertised hours? Are they neatly dressed? Do they ask normal questions? Do they fill out forms correctly? If we have a meeting, are they on-time? Did they get lost on the way? I swear that's 90% of the screening process.![]()
So did you get a good vibe from this family and that's why you are asking or am I confused and you are not the op?
Anonymous wrote:
Everyone I know who has a horror story has skipped several steps in the "due diligence" process of picking tenants. I swear I don't even need to run a background check anymore, I've done this so much. Do they show up at the open house during the advertised hours? Are they neatly dressed? Do they ask normal questions? Do they fill out forms correctly? If we have a meeting, are they on-time? Did they get lost on the way? I swear that's 90% of the screening process.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not a chance. Take the time to find the right person, then treat them well. It makes landlording the easiest business around. (11 years, 7 properties, no problems). I'd rather leave it vacant than rent to the wrong candidate, and it's served me well over the years.
Is this your main job or hobby/part-time. I am in similar position w/multiple rentals.
I'm a SAHM and but I'd still say part-time for sure. There are busy times when I might work 3 or 4 hours a day but those days are rare. I would estimate I spend about 5 hours a week, on the average. I have lockboxes on all the houses and a tested, trusted team of repair-people so if something breaks I can send the repair-people in without visiting the property myself. We fix things right away, replace appliances as they age, keep the houses updated with new carpet and paint (we just replaced a perfectly functional but UGLY kitchen including cabinets, counters, and flooring), and treat the tenants with respect. In return, we expect rent the DAY it's due, choose tenants carefully before they move in, and expect the house and outside (and neighbors) to be treated with respect. It's been great.
Everyone I know who has a horror story has skipped several steps in the "due diligence" process of picking tenants. I swear I don't even need to run a background check anymore, I've done this so much. Do they show up at the open house during the advertised hours? Are they neatly dressed? Do they ask normal questions? Do they fill out forms correctly? If we have a meeting, are they on-time? Did they get lost on the way? I swear that's 90% of the screening process.![]()