Anonymous wrote:They're probably hoping to get friends to rent it . . . then they know they're not going to be party-ers who wreck the place.
I don't think it's tacky. You chose to be friends with this person on social media. They have no idea that you begrudge them their blessings rather than cheer for them.
I don't think it's a universal experience to feel angry and envious when people post nice things. It's probably a bell curve, with 10% of people being ridiculously overjoyed for other people when they see these posts, and 10% of people being angry and bitter, and most people being mostly "meh." My point is that you can't expect other people to avoid posting this stuff when the majority of people are happy for them, or indifferent. You can simply solve your problem by getting off of social media or unfollowing them.
But life is short, eh? Is judging people's posts how you want to have spent it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the big deal? Does this really make you angry? Do their posts take away from the quality of your life?
It’s shameless, tacky, and greedy. Sorry your “side hustle” makes you look like uncouth hard-up trash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve had a vacation home for 15 years and just let friends use it without payment. I could not imagine charging someone for its use.
Same here..we just ask them to take care of the place and to pay the our out of pocket nominal property management fee. We don't want to profit off family and friends. We are just happy enjoy it. Otherwise, it would just stay empty.
Anonymous wrote:Are these people really that hard up for cash? I really don't think they are. Look at us, in addition to our local mansion, we have a vacation home one of the proles in our social media friend group can give us thousands of dollars to use when we don't feel like driving there.And the families we know doing this are actually nice, so it's bizarre how tacky and obnoxious they are in this regard. And no, they're not over-extended. It's just greed, I guess?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve had a vacation home for 15 years and just let friends use it without payment. I could not imagine charging someone for its use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We post ours now and again. It’s an investment so we rent it out, if we get last min cancellations we will offer a deal to friends/family. Not sure what your issue is OP?
We've always done the bolded -- sometimes at no charge to who's staying there.
We prefer that the property is used consistently, as friends of ours have had the biggest nightmares happened to them when the property had a vacancy of no more than 2 to 3 weeks in a row.
There have been everything from robberies to a stranger forging a one year rental agreement on the home, moving their stuff in & refusing to leave... and the police wouldn't get involved because it was a "civil" manner.
If you all don't think that this can't happen to you, in the home you own & live in right now (not just a vacation homes) you're sadly naive & mistaken.
All these con artists would have to do, is wait for you to leave for an extended period of time, like an 8 hour work day or a weekend, and you'll come home the find the locks changed and the "tenant" refuses to speak with you or open the door, and then THEY threaten to call the police on YOU.
So, the police show up & won't do a damn thing to help, because the "tenant" will produce a (forged) lease & (forged) receipt of payment for a year's rent that looks legit. The police won't know who to believe, so they'll tell you all to take it up in court... and courts are still so backed up due to covid, cases are being scheduled 6 - 12 months out. In the meantime, you have to hire a lawyer AND find someplace else for you and your family to stay until the court date comes -- meanwhile, they're living in your home, using your furniture, going through your private property & valuables, and you cannot do a thing about it, because they never leave the home so that you can claim it back.
It took those friends almost 13 months and over $20,000 in attorney's fees just to get their home back - on top of that, they lost all of the revenue for the entire summer season & had to keep paying the mortgage in the property.
Other friends had their beach house robbed when the home was vacant for two full weeks due to cancelations.
In that time, the thieves were able to get in and out a few times without detection, and by the time the homeowners were notified of the break in (by the next family who were there to rent it) it was weeks later and there was no hope of catching who did it.
Plus, they had to reimburse the people who had come to the home that weekend, because the basement door had been jimmied open, and they would have no way of securing the property (our friends had the cleaning people come right after the previous renters left, assuming the house would be rented again by the very next people (who were scheduled to arrive in a few hours) but those people cancelled, so the house sat empty & clean for two full weeks -- that's why the new renters were the ones who found it broken into).
Yes, they had a RING, for their front door & patio door, but the basement door is neither viewable nor accessible to someone who just walks up to the house from off the street and decides to randomly rob it (you'd have to be aware of the finer details of the property & the property's intricate layout to find that door) so they didn't think to put a RING on it, because literally nobody outside of the family could used that door... like ever. Not even the renters.
The renters could see the door, but didn't have a key to open it.
The police assumed it was a previous VRBO renter, because no body else could know where to break in to avoid the cameras and also not be detected by neighbors.
I'd much rather have a friend or family member stay at my place for free, because after hearing so many stories (I just told you two, but we know of dozens more).
IMO, someone physically staying at my house is actually doing me a favor, so I'm happy not to charge them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We post ours now and again. It’s an investment so we rent it out, if we get last min cancellations we will offer a deal to friends/family. Not sure what your issue is OP?
We've always done the bolded -- sometimes at no charge to who's staying there.
We prefer that the property is used consistently, as friends of ours have had the biggest nightmares happened to them when the property had a vacancy of no more than 2 to 3 weeks in a row.
There have been everything from robberies to a stranger forging a one year rental agreement on the home, moving their stuff in & refusing to leave... and the police wouldn't get involved because it was a "civil" manner.
If you all don't think that this can't happen to you, in the home you own & live in right now (not just a vacation homes) you're sadly naive & mistaken.
All these con artists would have to do, is wait for you to leave for an extended period of time, like an 8 hour work day or a weekend, and you'll come home the find the locks changed and the "tenant" refuses to speak with you or open the door, and then THEY threaten to call the police on YOU.
So, the police show up & won't do a damn thing to help, because the "tenant" will produce a (forged) lease & (forged) receipt of payment for a year's rent that looks legit. The police won't know who to believe, so they'll tell you all to take it up in court... and courts are still so backed up due to covid, cases are being scheduled 6 - 12 months out. In the meantime, you have to hire a lawyer AND find someplace else for you and your family to stay until the court date comes -- meanwhile, they're living in your home, using your furniture, going through your private property & valuables, and you cannot do a thing about it, because they never leave the home so that you can claim it back.
It took those friends almost 13 months and over $20,000 in attorney's fees just to get their home back - on top of that, they lost all of the revenue for the entire summer season & had to keep paying the mortgage in the property.
Other friends had their beach house robbed when the home was vacant for two full weeks due to cancelations.
In that time, the thieves were able to get in and out a few times without detection, and by the time the homeowners were notified of the break in (by the next family who were there to rent it) it was weeks later and there was no hope of catching who did it.
Plus, they had to reimburse the people who had come to the home that weekend, because the basement door had been jimmied open, and they would have no way of securing the property (our friends had the cleaning people come right after the previous renters left, assuming the house would be rented again by the very next people (who were scheduled to arrive in a few hours) but those people cancelled, so the house sat empty & clean for two full weeks -- that's why the new renters were the ones who found it broken into).
Yes, they had a RING, for their front door & patio door, but the basement door is neither viewable nor accessible to someone who just walks up to the house from off the street and decides to randomly rob it (you'd have to be aware of the finer details of the property & the property's intricate layout to find that door) so they didn't think to put a RING on it, because literally nobody outside of the family could used that door... like ever. Not even the renters.
The renters could see the door, but didn't have a key to open it.
The police assumed it was a previous VRBO renter, because no body else could know where to break in to avoid the cameras and also not be detected by neighbors.
I'd much rather have a friend or family member stay at my place for free, because after hearing so many stories (I just told you two, but we know of dozens more).
IMO, someone physically staying at my house is actually doing me a favor, so I'm happy not to charge them.
Lawyers of DCUM, please calm my anxiety and tell me the above horror story couldn't actually happen to me. A random robber couldn't come squat in my home for 13 months just by breaking in, changing the locks and printing up a fake lease agreement.
Also PP, how do you know dozens of stories like this?