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Okay, so my lease said to give a 60-day notice as to whether I'd chose to vacate or renew my apartment. I'm used to a 30-day so that's what I gave. Unofortunately I am stuck w/ an additional 30 days of rent, which I know I am responsible for and am willing to pay BUT my apartment manager isn't willing to work w/ me on that. I've been paying for rent this past year w/ student loans since I'm a full-time college student and part-time worker. I don't have enough to pay for the entire month's rent in full since I didn't plan on staying this long, so I've requested to make payments and they aren't willing to do that. I really want to pay this off b/c I don't want it to reflect my credit or renting history. Is this really going to lead to my eviction? Help! P.S. And is there anything against moving out early? I'm still willing to pay everything, but I now have other obligations.

2007-04-25 14:22:48 · 5 answers · asked by Cari 2 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

5 answers

You signed the lease, so there's really no way around the stipulations of the contract. (The truth is, it's entirely likely that they do this for precisely this reason, incidentally. Who plans to move 60 days ahead?)

However, you say that you gave 30 days notice, so you obviously made plans to move out and you say that you're willing to pay them the remaining 30 days in installments. What's to work with, exactly?

Sure, they won't like it. Er... not to be rude, but so what? I know you don't want it to show on your credit report, but how on earth would they evict you from a place you no longer occupy?

Besides, it's likely that they already have a deposit, yes? Generally, when you break a lease (or leave early) the landlord will tell you flat out that they will keep your deposit and put it toward the last month's rent you owe. (That may still leave you with a balance, if there's any damage to the property, though.) You should check into that possibility...

2007-04-25 14:38:24 · answer #1 · answered by ISOintelligentlife 4 · 1 0

They can't evict you for time you have paid for ,
Your issue is for future time . Just go ,
Old saying , can't get blood out of turnips ,
They will probably take you to small claims court where they will get a judgment for the 30 days + filing fees .
Not sure why you thought "what you were used to" took precedence over what you signed for in the lease contract . . . (and you're a college student ? guess you'll start doing that exotic skill called "reading" and maybe believe it ?)
Just keep paying what you can and if it's not paid by court time , they'll get a judgment for what is still due .

2007-04-25 14:37:25 · answer #2 · answered by kate 7 · 0 0

Looks like you owe them the money. Seems like you know that. Did you leave a deposit? ask them if they can take that instead of last month's rent. Or ask them when you will get your deposit back from them (after your lease is up). Perhaps you can let go of the cash if you can get your deposit back after 14 days...they should give it back to you when you vacate, if you write them a letter stating that you leaving early and give them the keys.

2007-04-25 14:45:53 · answer #3 · answered by thevoiceofreason2b 5 · 1 0

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2016-11-27 21:06:41 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You are contradicting yourself. You want to pay, but won't.

The apartment mortgage is due whether or not you pay the rent. You need to fulfill your obligation to the owner, regardless of what you are used to doing.

Time to call mom.

2007-04-25 14:31:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

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