Technology10 mins ago
Renting.
24 Answers
Hi guys.
I am looking at renting my house out and the woman who wants to rent it is on benefits.
She has said that she can't afford a deposit on top of the months rent for when she moves in.
Is it necessary for her to give a deposit?
Obviously, if she doesn't then she can't claim any money back at the end of her tenancy.
I'm new to this so just wanted some advice
Thank you in advance
I am looking at renting my house out and the woman who wants to rent it is on benefits.
She has said that she can't afford a deposit on top of the months rent for when she moves in.
Is it necessary for her to give a deposit?
Obviously, if she doesn't then she can't claim any money back at the end of her tenancy.
I'm new to this so just wanted some advice
Thank you in advance
Answers
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http://www.direct.gov...ourProperty/DG_189124
http://www.direct.gov...ourProperty/DG_189124
I would not want to rent to someone who didnt even have enough money for a deposit. I remember when I rented out a house to some students and my daughter was also living in the house. They came downstairs with their belongings one day and told her they wanted their deposit back there and then. She said to them. You forget I am studying law and legally there is a necessity to give a period of reasonable notice when you leave a property. Coming downstairs and telling me you are leaving is not a period of reasonable notice. In the event, they did have to forfeit some deposit though I dont remember much as this is a long time ago. I was glad I had a deposit though as a previous landlord was later trying to track them down for money they still owed on a previous property.
Best not to get into a rental agreement without getting the conditions laid down and a deposit from whoever you let it to.
Best not to get into a rental agreement without getting the conditions laid down and a deposit from whoever you let it to.
If you still have a mortgage on the property themalstebly you will need to inform your mortgage provider to get 'Consent to Let' and your interest rate will probably increase. Some lenders will not give consent to let to students and people in receipt of benefits. You will also need to inform your insurance company
Here's an example for you.
http://www.homes-for-...tenancy-agreement.htm
It mentions it in the first para here.
http://www.homes-for-...tenancy-agreement.htm
It mentions it in the first para here.
I would definitely not rent out to someone who did not have enough for the deposit. My daughter rented out her flat to a young lady, who seemed to be the perfect tenant - big mistake - she ended up disappearing with a lot of the items from the flat after she had been using the place almost as a brothel. She had loads of extra keys made and was giving them out to various other "ladies" and a print out of the phone bill showed many numbers who all seemed to have knowledge of the flat. The only way to go to get recompense was a) the deposit, and b) a small claims court case which daddy ended up paying for her before it ended in court, probably because he did not want the embarrassment of it being made public.