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The short-term rental market is one of the hottest segments in real estate and property management

The short-term rental market is one of the hottest segments in real estate and property management

1.Hidden Costs – Short-term rentals are a different breed; they have many costs that traditional long-term rentals don’t have. These behind-the-scenes costs can include everything from replacing furniture to landscaping the lawn to supplying toilet paper. In essence, they’re more like hotels than rental properties. Here’s a quick list of common unforeseen costs:

  • Maintenance – garden and lawn irrigation, pool maintenance, pest control, HVAC maintenance
  • Utilities – cable, electricity, Internet, telephone, etc
  • Upkeep – housecleaning, toiletries, replacing appliances, carpet cleaning
  • Annual fees – taxes, insurance, property management fees, license fees

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Tenant Screening: A Must for your Property!

Tenant Screening: A Must for your Property!

  • Posted: Oct 12, 2016
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If you want to minimize the risk in your property investment business, you should understand that a key to your success isn’t just buying the right investment property.

it’s finding the right property management–whether that’s you, or someone you hire. And a critical component of property management is finding the right tenant for your real estate investment property, which means tenant screening should be at the top of your priority list. Here are five things you can do to ensure that your tenant screening process helps you identify the best tenants and weed out the bad ones.

 

1. Let applicants know that tenant screening is mandatory.

Just hearing the words “screening process” will make some potentially bad renters self-filter and save you time.

2. Use your tenant screening process consistently.

A systematic and comprehensive screening process that you apply objectively to every applicant will protect you if someone claims you violated the Fair Housing Act. It will also help you to screen out bad renters.

3. Decide what your minimum qualifications will be, and stick to them.

Will you have income requirements so you have some assurance that your tenants can make their rental payments? Will you accept tenants with criminal records? What if they haven’t had any arrests for more than ten years and a steady job? Think about these issues, make a decision, and apply them consistently.

4. Run a credit check.

Credit checks are critical. You can find out applicants’ debt-to-income ratios and whether they pay their bills on time. Learn how to read a credit report. And never accept a credit report that a potential renter brings to you; get them directly from a credit reporting company.

5. Check references.

Always call present and past landlords. A present landlord may give a good reference to get rid of a bad tenant; a past landlord may be more forthcoming. Ask about evictions, complaints from other tenants, pets, major maintenance issues, if rent was paid on time, and if the landlord would rent to the tenant again. Also consider getting and checking employment and personal references.

 

Find Tenant Screening Companies on our Directory>>

 

If you don’t have the time or the desire to do tenant screening, don’t cut corners–consider hiring a property manager to help you. Alternatively, All Property Management has partnered with leading businesses, including TransUnion, to offer services to our clients. TransUnion offers a tenant screening service called MySmartMove that provides credit and criminal records checks, leasing recommendations, and suggested deposit amounts to independent property managers and residential real estate investors.

Have you screened tenants before? What methods did you use? Have you used social media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter. Do you think that’s a good idea?

 

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HOLIDAY CYBER SAFETY

HOLIDAY CYBER SAFETY

HOLIDAY CYBER SAFETY

 

What a beautiful time of the year when we celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, or Kwanzaa with family and friends and do our best to give each person on our shopping list THE perfect gift. To find that perfect gift we can fight the traffic and crowds at the mall or save time and aggravation by shopping online. Let’s go with the online approach. To successfully shop on line it is important for you to be aware of cyber criminals and the inventive and aggressive methods they employ to steal your
money and identity, and there are many. What are some of the popular schemes? The Fraudulent Classified Ads or Auction Sales and Nondelivered Merchandise are two that are easy to fall victim to. Let me explain; the Fraudulent Classified Ads or Auction Sales is a scam where the seller post items that are stolen or is purchased with a stolen credit card. The Nondelivered Merchandise is a scam where merchandise is sold that does not exist. The buyer purchases items online which is never delivered. How do you avoid becoming a victim and totally ruining your holiday shopping?

Well, here are a few tips to best protect yourself:

 

● Get to know as much about the seller as possible. Start with a Google search paying
special attention ratings, comments or complains. Research the BBB, many scam “artist” are listed on the FBI web site at ( www.fbi.gov/scamssafety/fraud ) or research your states business licenses sitesFlorida residents can log on to www.sunbiz.org or myfloridalicense.com.

● It is best to play it safe and buy from reputable companies you are familiar or have done business with in the past.

● Avoid companies that do not have a physical address. No company is based in a post office box.

● Send an email to make sure it is valid and call the contact number to make sure the
company even exist.

● Don’t base your decision to do business with a company on their web site. It is easy to set up a flashy web site which is just that…flash.

● When possible pay with your credit card so you can dispute the charge if there is a
problem.

● Avoid dealing with foreign companies. It is almost impossible to verify the legitimacy or get a refund from companies not in the US.

● Never respond to special investment offers because there is a real possibility the
“company” is only after your banking information to seal your identity.

● Beware of price differences, for example a designer hand bag for $19.99 which sells at Macy’s for $125.00 is, in all likelihood, fake.

● The old saying: “If it is to good to be true, it is.” applied back in the day and still does today. Shopping online can really simplify your holiday preparations if it is done with caution and due diligence.

 

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