Monday, April 2, 2012

Charlotte Property Management Monthly: Renting Out Your Home Is Not For The Timid? 4 Reasons Not To Believe The Neighbors

Due to the tough home sales market, some home owners have been thrust into being “accidental landlords”. Their homes won’t sell for the prices they need, they have to move, and they can’t afford to keep them empty indefinitely. So, left with little choice, they will (reluctantly) start the process of renting their homes out.




They start with strong intentions, but then fear takes over! After research which includes talking to neighbors (who all have friends and long lost relatives in the “rental know”) and watching multiple episodes of “The Wire”, they are not sure they can go through with it. There’s so much uncertainty! And risk!



After many web searches, their definition of a “tenant” morphs into:



“A class of unruly persons, usually insatiable smokers, who have extensively studied the art of home destruction and rental payment evasion; commonly known as ‘slackers’ and ‘apathetic deadbeats’, renters have been known to spill drinks and never clean them up, loosen automobile oil pans so driveways become marked for life, and run surreptitious animal compounds (without signing a stringent pet policy disclosure).”



That’s scary!



So, what should fearful home owners do? I’d recommend a few deep breaths for starters. Then let’s look at some facts:



1. Roughly 35% of the population rents currently. Many of the nice places we go to regularly are rentals. I can confidently tell you that a third of the US population is not bent on home destruction. If you believe they are, sell everything you have and buy stock in Home Depot and Lowes.



2. You have lived in a rental at least once in your life (and probably work in one!) and you consider yourself a good, responsible person.



3. Everyone has a “bad renter” story because the “good renter” stories are boring. It’s like how no one talks about all the airplanes that take off safely everyday, everywhere in the world thousands of times; you only hear about the rare occasion when one plane doesn’t.



Example:

Jim: Hey, my tenant paid on-time and in-full yesterday.

John: That’s great (yawn).



4. Being in the business, I can tell you that most people have pride in their homes. They don’t want to be dodging evictions- they feel embarrassed when they can’t provide for their families. They want their home to look nicely- it’s embarrassing when guests and family come over and their place looks disgusting. That includes smoking indoors (people don’t like visiting homes where there is a smoke smell indoors and most parents want their kids to have healthy air to breathe as well) and out-of-control pets (will most self-respecting people accept living in pet filth?).



Are some tenants more meticulous than others? Of course! But the large majority of tenants are fine people who pay on-time and treat their rental homes with respect (this is especially true after professional tenant screening checks!). The tenants just want to live their lives in peace and have home repair issues addressed in a timely manner from time to time. Their lives are not about getting one over on the owners of the rental homes they live in; it’s just a place where they live for the time being.



Don’t believe the hype. And breathe. Even the timid can safely rent out their homes no matter what stories your neighbors tell you!



Brett Furniss is the President & Owner of BDF Realty (“Charlotte’s Most Innovative Property Management & Investment Company”), and Rent-To-Sell Realty (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”) which specialize in rent-to-own (lease options) and rent-to-sell homes. His newest book, A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!)