My. Tesco Android Signal Is Poor
Technology2 mins ago
We are due to rent out a house and would like to know the pros and cons of whether to rent it out furnished, unfurnished or, if there is such a thing, part furnished. Any advice ABers?
Alison
No best answer has yet been selected by ali_alic. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The chap you spoke to is referring to a problem that existed many years ago when unfurnished properties typically attracted 'sitting tenants' that were difficult to evict, due to tenancies law at the time. However, legislation addressed this problem back in 1988 (the Housing Act), so under a post-1989 tenancy agreement, your rights as a landlord are the same whether your property is furnished or unfurnished.
Just add in my two cents....
Very much depends on where you are renting and who you are trying to attract. Personally, I would get a renting agency to come round and ask their advice. This is free and you don't need to take on their services. But they will let you know which one they think is better, and since this is their business......
You get my point
My best friend has 3 properties rented out (all through agencies), one furnished and two unfurnished. One is in Wellingborough, one in Nottingham and one in Milton Keynes - area can count for a lot.
Hope this helps
Yeah Ali - were you the lucky one asking if steroids were against the Q? anyway,
go for a short hold assured tenancy, for one year renewable.
The forms are available anywaywhere - or do a solicitor for the first one and then do it yourself. (�100-150)
charge a market rent
meet the tenants take up references
tell them what you expect and agree what they expect in return.
Do it unfurnished - but then you cant take cost of furntiture off takings before tax.
You can and should insure the outside and not the inside
Get the Central heating insured - its easier.
Sit back and take the rent!
Landlords let by the way, they dont rent, tenants rent.
Sorry, Miss Zippy, but I thought it best to state the obvious.....
My main point was that there is little point in taking 'general' advice on letting out places as each region is completely different. It may be easy to let out a furnished place in some areas of Milton Keynes for example, but try letting it out unfurnished would be almost impossible. It very much depends on who you want to be a tennant. Without any idea of locality and target market, any advice given is pretty much purely a guess!
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.