8 Ways to Protect Your Rental Property From Bad Tenants (VIDEO)

8 Ways to Protect Your Rental Property From Bad Tenants (VIDEO)

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When it comes to renting your house or an apartment complex most landlords have had terrible tenants. Now for some recommendations to arm you to do battle with tenants from hell who believe that by virtue of your ownership of the property you should become their private charity and allow rent-free living.

Protect Your Rental With These 8 Tips

1. SCREEN, Screen, screen… every applicant… and everyone who is over the age of 18 who will be residing in your property. Screening is the easiest way to know who the person or people are and how they manage their finances. Some property owners think that screening has become a thing of the past.

2. Ensure that your application is completed in its entirety for each applicant. Be sure to have the applicant sign documents allowing you to pull credit reports and contact current and previous landlords and employers. If they refuse toss the application.

3. Call every landlord and employer reference given. And, if calling doesn’t work then send a referral request not just asking for a referral, but asking specific questions, like: Has the tenant ever been late on their rent? Have you ever taken this tenant to rent court? If so, how many times in the past year? I think you get the picture here. These questions are not easy to avoid and will provide you with critical information needed to evaluate the quality of each applicant.

4. Complete a criminal background check. In today’s virtual world almost every community now posts information regarding a person’s run-ins with the law. Remember about the only non-protected tenant class left are those individuals with criminal records. Take advantage of this information.

5. Do an unscheduled walk-through of their current residence. If you don’t like what you find…. don’t accept them as your tenant. Most irresponsible tenants will have dirty clothes laying around the house and roaches all over the kitchen. These types of tenants are not the type of people you want to be renting to.

6. Your lease must be clearly written and defensible. If your lease has not been reviewed by a local real estate attorney, it needs to be. The last thing you need is some amateur Perry Mason, like the guy in that article, picking apart your lease in front of a judge.

7. If a prospective tenant passes your muster, (remember many more should fail then pass) then the next step is to sign the lease and have them move in. This should not be a transaction that is conducted at your local McDonald’s, because this is a critical step.

8. You must ensure that the lease signing occurs inside the property. Because, part of your lease signing process will include the tenant conducting their own move-in inspection for the purpose of defining – in their words – the condition of the property on the day they moved in. And guess what? While the tenant is busy looking the place over you are going to be taking pictures of them in the property and of course of any deficiencies they may have found. If there is something that you need to correct as part of this process get it corrected.

Landlording Tips For Dealing w/ BAD Tenants

Make sure they acknowledge every page of the lease by having them initial at the bottom of each page. If that is not good enough and there are specific clauses you want them to acknowledge then make sure they initial each clause. I am sure there are other important insights that others have used and hopefully, they will jump and share, but the bottom line here is this…

Your application process is intended to weed out the bad tenants upfront. If you do this right you will succeed most of the time. For those instances where you end up with the worst-case “professional tenant” scenario, the lease-up process is intended to give you ammunition once you find yourself defending the condition of your property in front of a judge. Be diligent, do your due diligence, use a bulletproof lease and robust processes and you should fair very well.