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
), and I wouldn't want a temporary fix. Anonymous wrote: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.
+1 I rent and my landlord tried to enforce a bogus "$100 repair deductible" clause (which I objected to while signing but he refused to remove the clause) when he had to pay a couple thousand dollars to have the main sewer line dug up and replaced from years of neglect. I promptly responded that I was not paying him anything in addition to my rent and told him that if he wanted, he could take it up with VA small claims court and that I'd be happy to provide the court with additional information re: lack of move-in inspection report and several items in the house that are not up to code (he renovated himself). He dropped the issue and stopped asking for the $100.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long after a move out can a landlord sue a tenant over these type of issues?
A walk through is done after the tenant moves out to ascertain what damages gave occurred. As previous posts have mentioned, scrapes and dings are considered normal wear and tear, a hole in the wall no.
The landlord has 45 days to return to the security deposit. If utilities were the tenant responsibility, you make sure those have been paid and if not, can be taken out of the security deposit.
Landlord kept the $350 deposit but is claiming another $450 in damages. He made non-specific comments about needing to repair or replace at the time of the move out, but didn't send an itemized list until 10 months later! My understanding is that he had tenants in between.
1) You should have done the walk through with the Landlord and taken pictures
2) you should have sent a registered letter to the landlord indicating the 45 day time was up.
This is a legal transaction and you need to handle it that way. Read your lease, put things in writing and follow up. As a LL I see too many tenants that don't read their leases or know what they are signing. When something comes up, like changing filters or doing basic maintenance, they are surprised.
Take your lease seriously and don't get emotional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long after a move out can a landlord sue a tenant over these type of issues?
A walk through is done after the tenant moves out to ascertain what damages gave occurred. As previous posts have mentioned, scrapes and dings are considered normal wear and tear, a hole in the wall no.
The landlord has 45 days to return to the security deposit. If utilities were the tenant responsibility, you make sure those have been paid and if not, can be taken out of the security deposit.
Landlord kept the $350 deposit but is claiming another $450 in damages. He made non-specific comments about needing to repair or replace at the time of the move out, but didn't send an itemized list until 10 months later! My understanding is that he had tenants in between.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long after a move out can a landlord sue a tenant over these type of issues?
A walk through is done after the tenant moves out to ascertain what damages gave occurred. As previous posts have mentioned, scrapes and dings are considered normal wear and tear, a hole in the wall no.
The landlord has 45 days to return to the security deposit. If utilities were the tenant responsibility, you make sure those have been paid and if not, can be taken out of the security deposit.
Anonymous wrote:Well, considering this has NEVER happened in any other place we have lived, it's not because we are somehow too vigorous in grabbing the toilet paper off the roll.I think they bought cheap versions of the hardware and didn't install them properly or properly anchor them into the wall, just screwed them into drywall.
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:How long after a move out can a landlord sue a tenant over these type of issues?
Anonymous wrote: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.
So they were fine when you moved in, and they fell out a month later.
Hmmmm....wonder why?
I think they bought cheap versions of the hardware and didn't install them properly or properly anchor them into the wall, just screwed them into drywall. 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.
As a landlord I would get calls for most of the items you mentioned there and it's our responsibility to fix. And some things, like plumbing or bathroom fixtures or kitchen cabinets we actually would n but if you still occupy hte place, I understand this that landlord has to fix at their expense. ot want our tenant to tinker with and mess up even more. Whenever you need experienced help, you call the landlord. Usually, if you have major damages, like scraped floors, holes in the walls, damaged carpet, broken window, etc, you can expect this to be taken out of your deposit upon move out. but if you still occupy hte place, I understand this that landlord has to fix at their expense.
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.
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: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.