terrontress
Registered User
- Messages
- 140
.
I would love to hear of a case where a landlord has pursued a tenant in court and got fully compensated for all losses, court costs, time and effort etc.
Me too. Having rented for a few years now I've never supplied a lease to a tenant, waste of time.
Obviously the tenant feels somewhat protected by the lease though...
How so? What extra rights does it give them that they don't already have.
That they will not have to undergo the hassle and costs of moving home within the duration of the tenancy period.
Or if I decided to start dropping in every now and again, that they could refuse entry if I had not given adequate notice.
.
terontress -I'm intrigued and you don't have to tell me.
You say you're outgings are far more than your rental. I'm assuming therefore that you bought a house ,rather than,say, a centrally located apartment. (Usually, house rentals don't produce the same returns as an apt).
I'm also assuming you're on a dearer variable mortgae rather than a cheap tracker.
If you had bought an apt and got tracker then ,regardless of the collapse in price,your rent should cover your loan repayments. In fact some people who bought in 2005 are paying less per month than some people who bought a similar property last year (2% of 400k costs less than 5% of 200k).
Anyway I was just curious.Sorry to be nosey.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?