Anonymous wrote:We rent and the toilet paper holders in TWO bathrooms broke/fell from wall within a month if our moving in. The towel holder in one bath also broke. None of this was our fault, so why should we pay? Cabinet doors are also coming loose, and I try to tighten them but it doesn't work. I'm not paying for fixing the cabinets. The rent I pay means that the landlord should provide all these things in good working order for the duration of my lease, absent any abuse or misuse by me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These answers are absolutely ridiculous and clearly posted by landlords.
The tenant is responsible for changing the air filters under most places.
The rest are normal wear and tear or repairs that the landlord should pay for.
Why in the world should a tenant have to replace the shower head? That is absurd.
Unless, of course, it says otherwise IN THE LEASE.
OP, I have that the tenant is responsible for miscellaneous repairs under $100. Batteries in fire alarms, light bulbs, toilet is stopped up because Junior uses too much TP, the toilet runs, a blind is broken (because they broke it).... I don't want them calling me out to the house for small crap.
If they break anything big I am still going to hold them responsible - that's what a security deposit is for.
When the motor in the fridge stopped working? I paid the repairman and even paid the tenant for the 7 pounds of chicken breasts she lost.
Normal wear and tear is faded paint, a few nail holes, scuff marks on walls and minor scratches on floors (not gouges), dirty finger print marks on walls and blinds. Anything beyond that is damage. See here. http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13108376
That's a BS lease term, illegal many places. If a tenant breaks something they should repair. If it worked when they moved in and it breaks from normal wear and tear it's the LL's responsibility. Now did I call my LL for every stupid thing? Of course not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These answers are absolutely ridiculous and clearly posted by landlords.
The tenant is responsible for changing the air filters under most places.
The rest are normal wear and tear or repairs that the landlord should pay for.
Why in the world should a tenant have to replace the shower head? That is absurd.
Unless, of course, it says otherwise IN THE LEASE.
OP, I have that the tenant is responsible for miscellaneous repairs under $100. Batteries in fire alarms, light bulbs, toilet is stopped up because Junior uses too much TP, the toilet runs, a blind is broken (because they broke it).... I don't want them calling me out to the house for small crap.
If they break anything big I am still going to hold them responsible - that's what a security deposit is for.
When the motor in the fridge stopped working? I paid the repairman and even paid the tenant for the 7 pounds of chicken breasts she lost.
Normal wear and tear is faded paint, a few nail holes, scuff marks on walls and minor scratches on floors (not gouges), dirty finger print marks on walls and blinds. Anything beyond that is damage. See here. http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13108376
So something that was shaky when OP moved in is now her fault to repair because her inspection wasn't detailed enough to note that every single toilet paper holder was perfectly secure? Give me a break. There are too many ridiculous landlords on here. OP, hopefully you live in DC where you are protected from the ridiculousness as a renter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These answers are absolutely ridiculous and clearly posted by landlords.
The tenant is responsible for changing the air filters under most places.
The rest are normal wear and tear or repairs that the landlord should pay for.
Why in the world should a tenant have to replace the shower head? That is absurd.
Unless, of course, it says otherwise IN THE LEASE.
OP, I have that the tenant is responsible for miscellaneous repairs under $100. Batteries in fire alarms, light bulbs, toilet is stopped up because Junior uses too much TP, the toilet runs, a blind is broken (because they broke it).... I don't want them calling me out to the house for small crap.
If they break anything big I am still going to hold them responsible - that's what a security deposit is for.
When the motor in the fridge stopped working? I paid the repairman and even paid the tenant for the 7 pounds of chicken breasts she lost.
Normal wear and tear is faded paint, a few nail holes, scuff marks on walls and minor scratches on floors (not gouges), dirty finger print marks on walls and blinds. Anything beyond that is damage. See here. http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13108376
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your contract states that tenants are responsible for minor repair and maintenance what does this mean to you? Assuming the issues were not present at time of rental but developed over the course of the contract? For example showerhead replacement, HVAC filters, toilet paper holders falling out of wall, kitchen cabinet doors coming loose, slow flowing faucets? As a renter I'm not sure what I should report to landlord and what I should take care of myself. I have a good relationship with landlord and he is pretty good at getting things fixed.
Btw this is not Europe. Landlords in the United States typically do repairs and maintenance and you should not sign a lease that states otherwise. The clause is probably not enforceable, and it certainly is not enforceable in DC.
OP again, would landlords deduct this from my security deposit if I moved out and theses things were broken?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These answers are absolutely ridiculous and clearly posted by landlords.
The tenant is responsible for changing the air filters under most places.
The rest are normal wear and tear or repairs that the landlord should pay for.
Why in the world should a tenant have to replace the shower head? That is absurd.
Unless, of course, it says otherwise IN THE LEASE.
OP, I have that the tenant is responsible for miscellaneous repairs under $100. Batteries in fire alarms, light bulbs, toilet is stopped up because Junior uses too much TP, the toilet runs, a blind is broken (because they broke it).... I don't want them calling me out to the house for small crap.
If they break anything big I am still going to hold them responsible - that's what a security deposit is for.
When the motor in the fridge stopped working? I paid the repairman and even paid the tenant for the 7 pounds of chicken breasts she lost.
Normal wear and tear is faded paint, a few nail holes, scuff marks on walls and minor scratches on floors (not gouges), dirty finger print marks on walls and blinds. Anything beyond that is damage. See here. http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13108376
Anonymous wrote:These answers are absolutely ridiculous and clearly posted by landlords.
The tenant is responsible for changing the air filters under most places.
The rest are normal wear and tear or repairs that the landlord should pay for.
Why in the world should a tenant have to replace the shower head? That is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your contract states that tenants are responsible for minor repair and maintenance what does this mean to you? Assuming the issues were not present at time of rental but developed over the course of the contract? For example showerhead replacement, HVAC filters, toilet paper holders falling out of wall, kitchen cabinet doors coming loose, slow flowing faucets? As a renter I'm not sure what I should report to landlord and what I should take care of myself. I have a good relationship with landlord and he is pretty good at getting things fixed.
Btw this is not Europe. Landlords in the United States typically do repairs and maintenance and you should not sign a lease that states otherwise. The clause is probably not enforceable, and it certainly is not enforceable in DC.
OP again, would landlords deduct this from my security deposit if I moved out and theses things were broken?
I would. Wear and tear is scuff marks on the walls, not fixtures ripped out.
Right, but if the thing was loose when OP moved in, then it was going to fall out at some point over the next two years, no matter who lived there. That is definitely something the landlord should fix and I would be certain to remind him that it was not in good working order when you moved in. Loose is not good working order. If the kitchen cabinet doors are loose, can you just tighten the screws and bolts yourself? Try that before calling landlord.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your contract states that tenants are responsible for minor repair and maintenance what does this mean to you? Assuming the issues were not present at time of rental but developed over the course of the contract? For example showerhead replacement, HVAC filters, toilet paper holders falling out of wall, kitchen cabinet doors coming loose, slow flowing faucets? As a renter I'm not sure what I should report to landlord and what I should take care of myself. I have a good relationship with landlord and he is pretty good at getting things fixed.
Btw this is not Europe. Landlords in the United States typically do repairs and maintenance and you should not sign a lease that states otherwise. The clause is probably not enforceable, and it certainly is not enforceable in DC.
OP again, would landlords deduct this from my security deposit if I moved out and theses things were broken?
I would. Wear and tear is scuff marks on the walls, not fixtures ripped out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your contract states that tenants are responsible for minor repair and maintenance what does this mean to you? Assuming the issues were not present at time of rental but developed over the course of the contract? For example showerhead replacement, HVAC filters, toilet paper holders falling out of wall, kitchen cabinet doors coming loose, slow flowing faucets? As a renter I'm not sure what I should report to landlord and what I should take care of myself. I have a good relationship with landlord and he is pretty good at getting things fixed.
Btw this is not Europe. Landlords in the United States typically do repairs and maintenance and you should not sign a lease that states otherwise. The clause is probably not enforceable, and it certainly is not enforceable in DC.
OP again, would landlords deduct this from my security deposit if I moved out and theses things were broken?