English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I recently moved out of an apartment I had lived in for 3 1/2 years. Is the apartment complex required to provide paint and carpet after this length of time? They are trying to charge me $900 for this. Am I responsible?

2007-08-09 13:19:05 · 3 answers · asked by Sharron S 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

Read your original lease and see if it requires to paint and clean carpets or replace if destroyed. if not you are not responsible. After 3 and 1/2 years i would think all those things would need done.

2007-08-09 13:25:48 · answer #1 · answered by ♥ Mel 7 · 0 0

Before you move into a rented Home or Apartment, be sure to do a walk through with the owner or property manager. Why? Because when you move out, the landlord may attempt to charge you for "damages" to the unit. What defines damages is often contested and the tenant, unless they have a move-in-checklist and pictures, may lose out in court.
A general rule of thumb - are you leaving the unit in the same condition as when you moved in? Again take pictures and have the landlord or property manager agree to the condition. Same when you leave.
A landlord can only withhold for damages only amounts that are deemed reasonable for the damage claimed. If a defect existed before you moved in, you should not be charged for that particular problem. The importance of pictures and a move-in checklist cannot be stressed enough.
Normal Wear and Tear is vague term and means different things to different people. So protect yourself.
Damages are actual things in the apartment that you or your guests actually break - such as a window or a hole in the wall.
Normal Wear and Tear may include things such as faded paint - you yourself did not cause the paint to fade, thus you would not be responsible if and when the landlord decides to repaint.

One common method of calculating the deduction for replacement prorates the total cost of replacement so that the tenant pays only for the remaining useful life of the item that the tenant has damaged or destroyed.
For example, suppose a tenant has damaged beyond repair an 8 old carpet that had a life expectancy of ten years, and that a replacement carpet of similar quality would cost $1,000. The landlord could properly charge only $200 for the two years’ worth of life (use) that would have remained if the tenant had not damaged the carpet.

Normal Wear and Tear Guide - Reference ONLY!
Normal:
Faded Paint. Paint may have a "useful life of 2-3 years, depending on who you ask. However, if you paint with a better paint, wiping down the walls works well.
Old, worn carpet when you moved in or furniture marks in carpet. The natural wearing down of carpet or drapes because of normal use or aging.
Worn hinges on doors or locks. Hole or ding in wall from missing door stop. Check each door.
Broken plumbing pipes, unless you damaged them. Central drain problems, not caused by your incorrect disposal of items. Older homes with old sewer lines may get roots growing through them, clogging the system.
Dirty Blinds - as in dusty.
General dust in the apartment. Be sure to clean behind the sofa and under.
"Faded" curtains that were in the unit when you came. However, to remove curtains that you placed and did not remove, you may be charged.
Bulb that went out in the refrigerator.

Damages
Holes in wall from hanging pictures, removal of Decals on the walls. Larger gouges etc.
Tear in carpet, animal stains (even if landlord knew you had a pet). Burn marks - iron, cigar, cigarette, ground in stains.
Doors with holes. Doors or windows broken. Glass etc.
Clogged drains caused by your misuse of sinks or toilets. If you rent to women (college girls for example) be sure to remind them to dispose of feminine products in the trash, not the toilet.
Broken or missing blinds or curtains. If they were there when you moved in, they must be there when you leave. If you do not want them, discuss this with your landlord. If he says "I don't care" send him a letter to confirm...as we discussed..
Eliminating Flea infestations caused by tenants animals. The same for smoke damage from smoking or burning candles.
Excessive Bathroom mildew. Use a good cleaning product like Tilex or Spray 409 weekly.
Broken shelves in a refrigerator. Excessive dirt/dust in the refrigerator vents. This is the area under the unit. Be sure to vacuum to improve the performance. Every time you vacuum, vacuum around the unit,
Excessive dirt or filth in an oven or refrigerator. Defrost the refrigerator if not frost-free. Stoves can take 2-3 hours to clean if you have cleaned it. Use Easy-off. That's why the named it that.

2007-08-09 13:27:19 · answer #2 · answered by ♥♥The Queen Has Spoken♥♥ 7 · 0 0

If you messed it up real bad, then you have to pay, thats your fault.

If they are just trying to be slick and put in a new carpet at your expense, they can't do that. Take them to court

2007-08-09 13:23:56 · answer #3 · answered by dzjynn 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers