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Now my question lies in regard the deposit. The letting agency have told me she is breaking her lease and will not get it back. Is this correct? If the tenant sublets it for the remaining term of the lease am I right in thinking they can then get it back. However I will only agree to this for 5 more months until the end of the original lease. If she cant get someone & I can't relet straight away am I right in thinking I can hold the deposit due to loss of rent?
I have had so much trouble for the past 7 months with this tenant and the agency itself
Don't forget to tell the agent he owes you the cost incurred at the start for getting a tenant for a one years lease.
So by your reckoning an agent can charge either 5% of annual rent or one month rent for getting a tenant in place. If the tenant leaves after one month that makes no sense at all. I have dealt with both a full time agent and an agent to get me a tenant and in both cases it was made clear by both parties that a one year lease is at best the minimum requirement. Any agent worth their salt would agree to this as they are not in the business of getting bad tenants as they would soon be out of business. I would consider not asking for a refund from the agent in the case where I had a deposit up front and the tenant was paid up if they were solely acting as a letting agent.I don’t believe the letting agent owes anything as a result of this tenant leaving early.
Any letting agent I ever dealt with, showed the property, found a suitable tenant, got and checked references, got a signed lease in place between landlord and tenant, took meter readings, collected the deposit and first months rent from which they took their fee and passed on the balance to landlord, handed over keys and that was the end of their obligations.
As the lease was between landlord and tenant, If the tenant decides to leave before the end of the fixed term lease then it is the landlord’s problem not the letting agents, and up to the landlord to decide if they wish to withhold the deposit and pursue the rent from the tenant for the remainder of the lease, if unable to re let.
I would have thought this is standard for all letting agents.
So by your reckoning an agent can charge either 5% of annual rent or one month rent for getting a tenant in place. If the tenant leaves after one month that makes no sense at all. I have dealt with both a full time agent and an agent to get me a tenant and in both cases it was made clear by both parties that a one year lease is at best the minimum requirement. Any agent worth their salt would agree to this as they are not in the business of getting bad tenants as they would soon be out of business. I would consider not asking for a refund from the agent in the case where I had a deposit up front and the tenant was paid up if they were solely acting as a letting agent.
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