Not necesaarily. I have lived in one apartment where my water and trash pick-up was included in teh rent. Then I have lived in another where I paid for both myself. These were both in teh same area, so I assume it is a matter of preference in terms of how you want to market your property. Some people might be drawn to perks like having certain "little things" taken care of - and you could always compensate for that in the price of the rent.
2007-04-19 16:12:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anj 3
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Its like cable TV and internet service, unless they agreed upfront to pay for it, you have to pay it. As a landlord I usually put it in the rent because I want to make sure it gets picked-up.
I know of no city where the trash pick-up is free, there is always an assessment either by bill or by tax.
2007-04-16 11:46:38
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answer #2
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answered by Seano 4
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I would doubt it. I would expect that it would be the responsibility of the tenant. In situations like this, I would not be suprised to see a clause in the lease about the condition of the house that requires the tenant to keep the trash taken out or face eviction or higher rent or something.
A landlord might make arrangements to keep it under control if the landlord figured it meant a better chance of the house being left in a better state and also a lot smaller chance of insect and rodent infestation. I still expect this to be up to the landlord though.
2007-04-16 10:43:20
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answer #3
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answered by A.Mercer 7
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Only if it is in your contract. Most landlords do pay for garbage service just so you won't allow it to accumulate everywhere, but not every landlord does. You may be on the hook for the disposal.
2007-04-16 11:34:47
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answer #4
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answered by godged 7
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call the trash corporation and ask them their coverage. If it truly is actual (and its actual conceivable) i might merely ruin the factor up and positioned it into trash baggage and then positioned them obtainable some each pickup day. they're going to finally end up taking all of it and in no way realize it truly is going to've value greater desirable.
2016-12-20 16:33:48
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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It depends. Is it specifically excluded in the rental agreement? Then no. Is it a house (not an apartment)? Then usually no.
Also, different cities have different rules. Check your local laws.
2007-04-16 10:47:11
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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