Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the tenant's home so it is fine for her to stay. Did your agent ask what time would work for the tenant? That would have been a thoughtful thing to do.
I would be worried about buying a home with a tenant in place. How much notice did the seller give to the tenant?
I don't know why people are being hard on OP about buying a home, happens all the time. As a renter if you don't want to have to move due to someone buying the property rent from a rental company/ building that is all rental, etc. Staying just to stay is a jerk move, especially if you have been given ample notice. Landlords did not get any mortgage freeze like renters got from the government on paying rent during Covid. (Not a landlord)
Well I am a landlord and would be pissed if a buyer tried to ask my tenant to leave her home for three hours for an inspection. What difference does it make if she is there? Is she going to stand on top of a water-damaged floor to hide it or something?
If I were a landlord trying to sell a house and a buyer asked this of my tenant, I would tell them that they need to pay her hourly wages for the duration that she would need to be out of the house if they wanted to ask my tenant to vacate her house when she was working and had a young child at home. Otherwise, I would ask the tenant if there were any times when she was not scheduled to work when she could vacate the house to allow them in. If that means you have to pay a premium to get an inspector on a Saturday afternoon or a Sunday morning, so be it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It's perfectly acceptable. They do not have to leave and they have legitimate reasons to be there. They aren't interfering with anything. You ATA.
OP here: I get they have a lease and can stay but it’s just odd to me and annoying and even my agent said she’d never once had a tenant stay during an inspection. I’m just worried about a toddler getting in the way during it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never leave my home with my personal property in it for a group of strangers to go looking in cabinets and wardrobes. Not only would I stay for the entire thing, I would actually follow them around and make sure they didn’t take anything.
Do you ever plan on selling a home?
I'm curious about the sales process in this context.
Yes I’ve sold homes. I get all my personal stuff out of it before I invite strangers through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the tenant's home so it is fine for her to stay. Did your agent ask what time would work for the tenant? That would have been a thoughtful thing to do.
I would be worried about buying a home with a tenant in place. How much notice did the seller give to the tenant?
I don't know why people are being hard on OP about buying a home, happens all the time. As a renter if you don't want to have to move due to someone buying the property rent from a rental company/ building that is all rental, etc. Staying just to stay is a jerk move, especially if you have been given ample notice. Landlords did not get any mortgage freeze like renters got from the government on paying rent during Covid. (Not a landlord)
Well I am a landlord and would be pissed if a buyer tried to ask my tenant to leave her home for three hours for an inspection. What difference does it make if she is there? Is she going to stand on top of a water-damaged floor to hide it or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It's perfectly acceptable. They do not have to leave and they have legitimate reasons to be there. They aren't interfering with anything. You ATA.
OP here: I get they have a lease and can stay but it’s just odd to me and annoying and even my agent said she’d never once had a tenant stay during an inspection. I’m just worried about a toddler getting in the way during it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP did you try to schedule the inspector to accommodate the tenant's schedule?
Your agent should have also told you that many sellers wait until a lease is up, the tenant has moved out, and then they fix up the house for sale.
OP here: yes we did. We were told between 9am-12pm or 3pm-5pm Thursday or Friday so we chose 3pm Thursday. I just didn’t realize that meant she’d be staying, we just assumed those were times she could be out of the home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never leave my home with my personal property in it for a group of strangers to go looking in cabinets and wardrobes. Not only would I stay for the entire thing, I would actually follow them around and make sure they didn’t take anything.
Do you ever plan on selling a home?
I'm curious about the sales process in this context.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It's perfectly acceptable. They do not have to leave and they have legitimate reasons to be there. They aren't interfering with anything. You ATA.
OP here: I get they have a lease and can stay but it’s just odd to me and annoying and even my agent said she’d never once had a tenant stay during an inspection. I’m just worried about a toddler getting in the way during it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP did you try to schedule the inspector to accommodate the tenant's schedule?
Your agent should have also told you that many sellers wait until a lease is up, the tenant has moved out, and then they fix up the house for sale.
OP here: yes we did. We were told between 9am-12pm or 3pm-5pm Thursday or Friday so we chose 3pm Thursday. I just didn’t realize that meant she’d be staying, we just assumed those were times she could be out of the home.
Anonymous wrote:It is the tenant's home so it is fine for her to stay. Did your agent ask what time would work for the tenant? That would have been a thoughtful thing to do.
I would be worried about buying a home with a tenant in place. How much notice did the seller give to the tenant?
I don't know why people are being hard on OP about buying a home, happens all the time. As a renter if you don't want to have to move due to someone buying the property rent from a rental company/ building that is all rental, etc. Staying just to stay is a jerk move, especially if you have been given ample notice. Landlords did not get any mortgage freeze like renters got from the government on paying rent during Covid. (Not a landlord)
Anonymous wrote: Op here: Why? We were told the seller let them know their lease won’t be renewed and that our closing (as long as inspection goes well) will be December 15th and that we’d like them out by the 8th the absolute latest. If their lease isn’t renewed, how would they just stay?
Anonymous wrote:I would never leave my home with my personal property in it for a group of strangers to go looking in cabinets and wardrobes. Not only would I stay for the entire thing, I would actually follow them around and make sure they didn’t take anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP did you try to schedule the inspector to accommodate the tenant's schedule?
Your agent should have also told you that many sellers wait until a lease is up, the tenant has moved out, and then they fix up the house for sale.
OP here: yes we did. We were told between 9am-12pm or 3pm-5pm Thursday or Friday so we chose 3pm Thursday. I just didn’t realize that meant she’d be staying, we just assumed those were times she could be out of the home.
Why does this bother you so much? What do you think the tenant will do? Sway the inspector? Protest what the inspector finds? The tenant is moving out and doesn't own the home and doesn't care what the inspector finds. In fact, the tenant will likely already know some of the problems the inspector points out.