13 November 2025 | 12 replies
Applicant's monthly household income must exceed three times the rent.
13 November 2025 | 3 replies
Neither the Kenosha nor the Racine Landlord Associations are that progressive yet; they still tend to serve traditional investing.
16 November 2025 | 21 replies
You and the tenants can agree mutually to end or change the lease, but they do not get to tell you that they are moving out mid lease.When a tenant wants to move other tenants in, we do allow it, but they have to go through the application process.
12 November 2025 | 11 replies
I set the Credit Score as 650+ negotiable in Zillow and I had two immediate applications with very bad scores.
15 November 2025 | 9 replies
Landlords must provide at least 90 days’ written notice for any rent increase, including a detailed explanation of the tenant’s rights and any applicable relocation assistance.""
13 November 2025 | 19 replies
"the applicant is expected to give us assurance that they will not give us a problem" gtfo this is ridiculous.
17 November 2025 | 14 replies
@Michael Kopa First, read your contract for the termination requirements and fees.Follow what's required.Try to get everything you can from the current PMC BEFORE letting them know about termination:- Lease- Rent Ledger- Any application info they can legally give you- Any data about the propertyThen start termination process.Then do an intro email between the old & new PMCs, so you can monitor how the old PMC is cooperating.
12 November 2025 | 19 replies
Add all the new AI-generated application fraud and it's a given that nonpayment, eviction & theft (fraudster tenants will also steal appliances +more) challenges will increase.
11 November 2025 | 11 replies
Hmmmm, I see a 2/2 apartment in the Slaughter/Menchaca area of South Austin that has been advertised on Zillow by a real estate agent for just shy of 4 months now without a single inquiry let alone an actual application.
11 November 2025 | 1 reply
From what I understand:You can’t rent out a home that still has lead pipes until they’re addressed (at least not without risk).The city is replacing them, but progress is slow.Even after the city replaces the public portion, I’d still be responsible for the private part inside the house — which can be expensive.So I have a few questions for those who’ve dealt with this:1.