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Are there any requirements or restrictions involved in renting property e.g age, income etc.?

2007-08-06 07:16:15 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

8 answers

Assuming as you are on the uk board you are in the UK- you would need to be 18. You will need, preferably to be working- finding a place on benefits is getting harder and harder. You will need one months rent up front plus about another six weeks rent to be the deposit. You will need a bank reference or employers reference and personal references (as you obviously won't have previous landlords reference) most agents charge you for drawing up contracts and doing the credit check, which can, but shouldn't cost a lot. Here in Farnborough we pay £250 per person for that. You will have to have a bank account because most landlords like to be paid by direct debit. Hope this helps you a bit.

2007-08-06 08:33:47 · answer #1 · answered by Ellie 6 · 0 0

That would depend on where you are renting and if you are renting from a private owner or an apartment complex.

With the way the current real estate market is, you can find many private landlords willing to accept - stable work history and good rental history without doing a credit check.

Good Luck

2007-08-06 08:22:52 · answer #2 · answered by house-hunter 2 · 0 0

A landlord can enter the premises without observe and without the permission of the tenant if he has genuine looking grounds to have confidence • an emergency makes it mandatory for him to circulate into the premises, or • the tenant has deserted the premises. what's genuine looking will count number upon each and all of the proper situations. for instance, if the tenant is away for the weekend and the owner enters the premises without observe or permission to repair a cabinet door, that would not be an emergency. The permission of the tenant could be won first. despite if, if the tenant is away for the weekend and there's a burst pipe and flooding, that could in all likelihood qualify as an emergency and allow the owner to circulate into without observe or permission. before a landlord enters premises the place he believes the tenant has deserted them, she or he could take some steps first to objective to make sparkling no remember if the tenant has certainly left the premises. Examples of issues the owner could do are to income the mail, see if utilities are nevertheless linked and seek advice from neighbours or kin. in the event that they are merely comming in, you're allowed to take criminal action. as quickly as a landlord has rented sources to a tenant, he supplies up the the main suitable option to be interior the valuables while the tenancy settlement commences, until the tenancy settlement can provide otherwise

2016-12-15 07:22:57 · answer #3 · answered by nations 4 · 0 0

You have to be able to afford it, or be on benefits.
If on benefits they will only pay a certain amount (i think the most they pay is £60 pw, but i could be slightly off with that amount) If the rent is more than this you will be expected to pay the excess. The council & housing assosiations have waiting lists for poor & disadvantaged people to get a house/flat but it takes years to get to the top of a council list, waras a housing assosiation may only have a waiting time of one month, but you have to appear desperate.

2007-08-06 07:34:45 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Generally you cannot discrimminate based on non-merit factors. Age is not a merit factor as long as the individual is of legal contractual age. Income IS a merit factor as you need to have enough income or other resources to be able to pay the rent.

2007-08-06 07:22:15 · answer #5 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

I'm not sure about the age , I would say it is 18

As for the income , you will have to able to pay the rent , Council Tax , and bills

2007-08-06 10:51:21 · answer #6 · answered by Stephen A 4 · 0 0

That may depend on where you live. I'm sure most places require you to be an adult with a regular income. The check credit as well as criminal.

2007-08-06 07:20:39 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well being able to afford the rent is always helpful.

2007-08-06 07:19:37 · answer #8 · answered by skullian 5 · 0 0

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