What you must repair and how quickly depends on the situation. The key issues are whether the broken item makes the unit uninhabitable and the effort you’re using to try to get it fixed. If the unit is furnished, you may want to fix something that may endanger the health…
Your ability to enter an occupied unit is restricted. Tenants not only pay for a right to occupy a space but, within limits, to enjoy it. That includes the ability to be left alone. Their rights to the unit conflict with your rights to protect and maintain it, and state…
Our previous blog discussed how tenants with disabilities can ask for reasonable accommodations and modifications to enjoy housing rights equal to those without disabilities. State and federal laws not only create these rights but also tell you how to handle them. How Must a Request be Made? It need not…
State and federal laws cover housing discrimination and those with disabilities. Depending on the nature of the disability and the requested accommodation, you may be legally required to provide it. Your obligation to accommodate the tenant has limits, so you may not need to do what they ask, but you…
Landlords want to avoid many issues, like bad plumbing, a leaky roof, or a tenant whose Harley-Davidson needs a muffler. Add to the list a tenant who hoards possessions (maybe even pets) to the point the unit is unsafe, unsanitary, and creates problems for other tenants. You can be proactive…
Disputes are bound to come up in any business relationship. Each tenant and landlord has their own approach to resolving differences, and how well they work varies depending on the issue and the person involved. If severe enough, a dispute may result in some legal action, but that’s an expensive…
Landlords have many reasons to want a tenant to leave, but they may not be grounds for eviction. Smart landlords avoid breaking the law by harassing tenants, changing locks, or stopping maintenance or repairs. If you have enough resources or are willing to forgo unpaid rent, you can negotiate a…
You rent space in a building. It’s very valuable. Who’s in that space and what they do there may mean the difference between a positive relationship and cash flow or a difficult relationship and losing money. You need to protect that space and your ability to make a living. If…
Property owners commonly charge fees for legitimate reasons, while others charge them to increase revenue. If all the fees were reflected in the rent, it would increase, and the price would be less competitive. Thanks to a bill signed into law in October by Governor Newsom, starting in July you…
If your building was constructed during or before the early 1980s, there’s a chance there’s asbestos in it. Asbestos is a mineral fiber that’s been used in thousands of products for hundreds of years. Some of those products were used in residential homes and apartment buildings. Asbestos is a public…