Commercial Finance Network

Avoiding Problems When Renting Property To Tenants

We are at the start of a new decade and many landlords are panicking. New regulations, lots of new regulations, are making renting property harder. However, so long as you take care to keep up to date and follow the rules, you should be fine.

People will always want somewhere to live, and your investment should hold its value.

Using a good letting agent is of course one way to go. However, although many agents are great, others are not, and it is often hard to tell good agents from bad. There is really no substitute to learning as much as you can yourself about the renting regulations, so you can check that your agents are doing things properly. Or so you can save money by doing things yourself.

Here is a list of some of the preliminary things you need to do before you start advertising for tenants:

1. Protect your property at the Land Registry

This is probably the most important thing of all. If you rent a property to tenants but the contact address for the property at the Land Registry is the property itself, it is easy for dishonest tenants to borrow money on the security of the property, or even sell it without your knowledge.
Find out more from the video here https://youtu.be/uX6K-HIe1ZU featuring landlord and tenant solicitor David Smith, speaking at the Landlord Law Conference.

2. Check you have permission to let

There are a number of things to consider here:

3. Make sure your property is in a proper condition

Once you are sure that you have all the necessary permissions, you need to make sure that the property is in a fit and proper condition before advertising it to let.

Landlords now not only have to comply with the repairing obligations (set out in section 11 of the Landlord & Tenant Act 1985) but also with the new legal obligations requiring property to be ‘fit for human habitation’.

Here are some of the other checks and inspections you need to do:

4. Ensure that you comply with Data Protection rules

This is something that is often overlooked. However, it is important and there are hefty penalties for non-compliance.

Compliance is not hard though:

Find out more about this here.

5. Make sure you keep up to date

Law, rules and regulations change. For example, parts of this article could be out of date if you are reading it months after it was first published. So, it is really important that you keep up to date with developments.

By Tessa Shepperson

Source: Residential Landlord

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