by: Brian Kline
It begins with the first contact whether that is by telephone or email. Regardless of the information you have in the advertisement, begin by making sure the prospective tenant understands your most basic requirements. These include:
- Amount of monthly rent
- Move in costs (rent, deposit, utility deposits, etc.)
- Length of the lease
- Charges or credit and/or background checks
- Anything else pertinent to your rental property
Beyond the Basics
When they understand the basics and are still interested in renting, you want to continue qualifying them with questions that stay on the right side of landlord/tenant laws. This means asking the same allowable questions of all tenants. The basic information you should collect during the first contact is:
- Name
- Contact information
- Reason for moving
- Number of people living in your rental and their relationships
- If there are pets and if anyone smokes
- Credit history – in their own words
- Previous landlord reference
People that are slow or have trouble providing this basic information are not good candidates for tenants. You could chose to continue the application process but might be wasting everyone’s time.
Check Them Out When Doing the Walk Through
Showing the rental and providing an application is the next step. Confirm a time for the appointment. When you are face to face with them, take note of:
- Do they show up on time or will they be tardy with the rent the same way they were for the appointment?
- Take notice of their personal appearance. Do they make a good first impression or will they keep your property in the same disheveled shape they keep them self?
- Same thing with the car they drive. How old is it? Is it in good repair? Is it clean and neat?
- Is the prospective tenant respectful and have good manners? Did they wipe their feet before walking in? Did they smoke inside? Do they allow children to run amok?
- Does the applicant ask appropriate questions or point out minor flaws indicating they’ll be trouble in the future?
- Are they prepared to fill out the application and pay a deposit or are they disorganized and wasting the time of you both?
Be sure to use a thorough rental application and collect a credit or background check fee along with a deposit to hold the property. If the prospective renter takes the application to fill out later, be sure they understand you may accept another tenant before they return the application if they didn’t pay a deposit.
Review the application thoroughly, looking for potential problems and inconsistencies. Check their references.
Once you approve them for the lease, set another appointment for the walk-through inspection and lease signing. Be sure to tell them how much money to bring and if it needs to be in cash, money order, certified check, or something else.
Of course, you need to have a quality lease that specifically covers your requirements for the property. You need to continue qualifying the prospective tenant right up until the time the lease is signed.
Details are good during the walk-through inspection. Pictures of problem areas are even better.
When it comes to signing the lease, read it out-loud to your new tenant to be sure they understand what it requires of them. Have them initial important sections such as the rent amount, the day of the month it is due, and any nonrefundable deposits.
Following these easy steps almost guarantees you’ll have a quality tenant and avoid landlord troubles down the road.
This article was written by Brian Kline and originally published on realtybiznews