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Updated 4 months ago on . Most recent reply

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9
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Yacine Bouabba
9
Votes |
23
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2 year lease vs 1 year lease

Yacine Bouabba
Posted

Hi everyone,

I’m currently considering renewing a lease for my good tenants and trying to decide between a one-year lease and a two-year lease. FYI, they are interested in a 2 year lease. I’d love to get your insights on the advantages and disadvantages of each option. Additionally, I’m curious to know what experienced landlords recommend based on their expertise.

Thank you so much for your input!

Most Popular Reply

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19
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Lucas Kurtz
  • Property Manager
  • MA
16
Votes |
19
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Lucas Kurtz
  • Property Manager
  • MA
Replied

This is a good problem to have. Good tenants who want to stay are worth thinking carefully about.

I’m Lucas with Howzer Property Management in MA, and we see this come up a lot.

One-year lease — pros

  • More flexibility to adjust rent annually as costs change

  • Easier to pivot if your plans for the property change

  • Keeps leases aligned with market cycles

One-year lease — cons

  • Slightly higher turnover risk, even with good tenants

  • More frequent renewals and paperwork

Two-year lease — pros

  • Stability and predictability (especially if they’re strong tenants)

  • Lower turnover risk and vacancy costs

  • Less administrative work

Two-year lease — cons

  • Rent can lag market if costs jump (taxes, insurance, utilities)

  • Harder to correct if the tenant situation changes

  • Less flexibility if your plans change

What we usually recommend
If you’re going to do a two-year lease, protect yourself:

  • Build in a rent increase for year two

  • Or include a mid-term rent adjustment tied to operating costs

  • Make sure maintenance responsibilities are crystal clear

In Massachusetts especially, expenses rarely stay flat for two years.

For owners who value flexibility, a one-year lease with a strong renewal history often ends up being the sweet spot and what we recommend. For owners who value stability and have great tenants, a structured two-year lease can make sense.

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer it really comes down to how confident you are in the tenants and how much flexibility you want as an owner.

Lucas- Howzer Property Management 

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