Anonymous wrote:Wife and I negotiated 300 off rent. Turns out some landlords will knock off hundreds for a longer term lease to DINKs vs groups
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can ask whatever they want in a craigslist ad but you can negotiate on rent.
sure you can negotiate - but good luck doing that in a market with < 1% vacancy rate
You would be amazed. Every single renter will come in with some negotiation point - whether it is framed as money off the rent, or something should be painted or a new appliance, etc. Everyone asks for something. So sometimes a landlord would rather knock a $100 off the rent then deal with replacing or fixing something.
Maybe for class A, but for class B in trendy neighborhoods, it's a landlord's market now. Tenants are grateful to find a place and aren't asking for any concessions.
Clearly you haven't rented for a while. We are renters and move every few years or so. And yes, even in the hippest, trendiest places, tenants negotiate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, try emailing some neighborhood listservs and say you are looking for a place to rent in the area. We found a very nice 3br rowhouse in for $2700 Brightwood that way. IMO individual homeowners are much more likely to offer affordable rent.
Np. Also looking for a place. How do I get on neighborhood list serve?
Anonymous wrote:Come out to burbs and have an entire house with a nice yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again - also agree Craigslist is not the best. We saw a few rental companies that would post nice looking houses in the $2500-2800 range again and again on CL, and but would never respond to inquiries. Not sure what the scam is, but it is a misleading representation of the market.
Probably the place rented already. I stop responding to emails about my rental unit because it got into the hundreds. I had already rented it, and I didn't have time to respond to everyone. Got to move fast in this town!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can ask whatever they want in a craigslist ad but you can negotiate on rent.
sure you can negotiate - but good luck doing that in a market with < 1% vacancy rate
You would be amazed. Every single renter will come in with some negotiation point - whether it is framed as money off the rent, or something should be painted or a new appliance, etc. Everyone asks for something. So sometimes a landlord would rather knock a $100 off the rent then deal with replacing or fixing something.
Maybe for class A, but for class B in trendy neighborhoods, it's a landlord's market now. Tenants are grateful to find a place and aren't asking for any concessions.
Anonymous wrote:PP again - also agree Craigslist is not the best. We saw a few rental companies that would post nice looking houses in the $2500-2800 range again and again on CL, and but would never respond to inquiries. Not sure what the scam is, but it is a misleading representation of the market.
Anonymous wrote:OP, try emailing some neighborhood listservs and say you are looking for a place to rent in the area. We found a very nice 3br rowhouse in for $2700 Brightwood that way. IMO individual homeowners are much more likely to offer affordable rent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can ask whatever they want in a craigslist ad but you can negotiate on rent.
sure you can negotiate - but good luck doing that in a market with < 1% vacancy rate
You would be amazed. Every single renter will come in with some negotiation point - whether it is framed as money off the rent, or something should be painted or a new appliance, etc. Everyone asks for something. So sometimes a landlord would rather knock a $100 off the rent then deal with replacing or fixing something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you guys think is a fair price for a decent (renovated but not top of the line) 3br rowhouse in, say, Brookland or Petworth?
$3000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can ask whatever they want in a craigslist ad but you can negotiate on rent.
sure you can negotiate - but good luck doing that in a market with < 1% vacancy rate