Landlord wants to manage thermostat
12 Replies
David Wilson
posted 8 months ago
There is a smart thermostat in the house I am renting. My landlord would like me to connect the thermostat to my WiFi so that he has access through the nest app to the thermostat. He hasn't mentioned wanting to actively control it, though it is annoying to me that he wants to check up on me and he hasn't always been reasonable with me in the past, so I am wary of giving him the ability. Beyond that, I pay all utilities, don't set the thermostat to weird temperatures that are outside what folks would consider reasonable (in the summer, 70-74 when home), and I treat the house very well. The lease is silent on this. Can anyone think of a scenario where I would be required to do this? Maintaining a good relationship is important to me, but I would appreciate any off-the-cuff advice and would like to know if I could be required some how. Thanks!
Scott Mac
from Austin, TX
replied 8 months ago
SJW climate activist maybe (???)
I run my A/C at 68 degrees and enjoy it.
Jim Adrian
Architect from Papillion, NE
replied 8 months ago
I don't see any need to letting the landlord have access to this. If you didn't have internet what would he do? I think the landlord wants to spot check to see if you are abusing the equipment from time to time. Hooking it up the thermostat to the internet is a "convenience" and not "need".
Lauren Kormylo
Rental Property Investor from Phoenix, AZ
replied 8 months ago
Mindy Jensen
BiggerPockets Community Manager from Longmont, CO
replied 8 months ago
I would ask him for his reasoning before outright saying no. He could simply wish to monitor the unit so he can make sure it doesn't get too cold and the pipes freeze in the winter? I wouldn't outright say no, but I'd definitely ask for access to the thermostat via the internet, too.
Peter M.
Rental Property Investor from DFW, TX
replied 8 months ago
@David Wilson You have no requirement to provide this to him. If you do you should be compensated. But he could just buy a thermostat with it's own cellular connection without using your internet. I believe verizon offers them through Honeywell and its 10/month for the "phone line" plus the cost of the thermostat. So I'd say if you let him connect to your internet you should get at least a $20 credit
Pat L.
Rental Property Investor from Upstate, NY
replied 8 months ago
Sure disconnect it from the furnace add your own & let him play with it as long as he pays half your internet costs/month :)
My son had to do this to stop his young kids hacking the Nest.
Nick C.
Real Estate Broker from Tampa, FL
replied 8 months ago
If it's not in the lease there is no requirement to do this. As a landlord I would not ask this of any tenant. And as a former tenant I would have said no. While a tenant is renting it is their house. If he's worried about someone abusing his systems, he should have screened them out and not rented to them in the first place.
Richard Arden
from New London CT
replied 8 months ago
If you are paying for the heat your landlord has no right to your thermostat.
If he is paying for the heat... he should have it in the lease that he has control of the temperature.
Lynn McGeein
Real Estate Agent from Virginia Beach, VA
replied 8 months ago
If there's nothing in the lease about it and you pay the utilities, then you don't have to allow his access. But expect a change in your lease at renewal, however, if you were planning to stay as he'll likely add it in then. My lease does require tenants to pay for all utilities and has a clause that heat shall be maintained at a minimum of 58 degrees in colder weather, even if tenant is away. Not sure if this would give me the right to monitor - I never have - but I actually know several instances of renters who have gone on vacation in Jan/Feb and turned their heat off to save themselves the $20 or so in bills, only to have pipes freeze when they were away. So I understand landlord's concern and discuss it with my tenant at lease signing.
Matt Nico
replied 8 months ago
Originally posted by @David Wilson :There is a smart thermostat in the house I am renting. My landlord would like me to connect the thermostat to my WiFi so that he has access through the nest app to the thermostat. He hasn't mentioned wanting to actively control it, though it is annoying to me that he wants to check up on me and he hasn't always been reasonable with me in the past, so I am wary of giving him the ability. Beyond that, I pay all utilities, don't set the thermostat to weird temperatures that are outside what folks would consider reasonable (in the summer, 70-74 when home), and I treat the house very well. The lease is silent on this. Can anyone think of a scenario where I would be required to do this? Maintaining a good relationship is important to me, but I would appreciate any off-the-cuff advice and would like to know if I could be required some how. Thanks!
David,
I am a landlord, and I actually have nest thermostats in all of my properties, and I have access to them.
My properties are house hacks, so I set the temperature that the tenants want it at. An added bonus of the nest is that it senses when your AC unit is not working properly or when the filter needs to be changed. I'm not sure why your landlord would want this information if you are responsible for utilities though. I would just be up front with him and ask.
-Matt
Theresa Harris
replied 8 months ago
IF you do connect it to your wifi, wouldn't he need access to your network to access the thermostat? I don't know, I'm asking. If that is the case, I would tell him it works well and you don't see the need to connect it to the wifi and if you did, you are not comfortable giving him access to your wifi information.
Corey Hawkinson
Rental Property Investor from Bloomington, MN
replied 8 months ago
@David Wilson I agree with the people that said to ask the landlord what information he is looking to obtain. Some thermostats can tell when a filter needs to be replaced. He/she could be looking for that info. Others now can detect when units are too loud which can be useful for apartment buildings. They do not record conversations but do record decibels to know if a unit was too loud at 3:00 AM every day of the week.