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new home can he do something if i only pay the old rent amount and by the way i dont have a contract

2007-11-11 10:42:48 · 13 answers · asked by gg 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

13 answers

yes he can evict you. Your best bet is to sit down with your landlord and tell him that you cannot afford the increase and will be forced to move. See if he is willing to keep the old rental rate until he can find new tenants or until you can find a new place. Also, in California, he has to give you 30 days notice with increases under 10% and 60 days notice on increases over 10%. Check your state laws.

Regards

2007-11-11 10:47:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

If there is no contract, he can legally change the rent whenever he likes whether you can afford it or not. What I would do if I were in your shoes is be honest with him. Let him know that you can't afford the rent raise and if he does raise the rent you will have to move. If he still insists on the raise, see if you can come to an agreement (say a month or so) for you to remain in the home at the same price until you can find another place. Good luck.

2007-11-11 10:48:58 · answer #2 · answered by Becky J 2 · 0 0

You need a written agreement #1 to protect yourself. Let's say that you paid $500 for two months, and then the landlord tell you that you have paid $550; says who??
Always get things in writing and then there is no misunderstanding. If you had a six months rental agreement he could not raise your rent until the agreement time was up. Month to month, you are at the mercy of the landlord being fair.

How long have you lived there? Do you always pay for rent on time?? Is there a relative or friend that wants your apartment?? Raising your rent to move you out is another problem in its self.

All they have to do is to give you a thirty day notice for the rent increase. If you do not pay the new amount you could get a three day notice to pay up or move.

2007-11-11 11:17:59 · answer #3 · answered by LADY AT THE LAKE 3 · 1 0

After he tells you that he is raising the rent, he has to allow you to pay the old rent for a certain amount of time, which varies by state, but is typically one month or 30 days, before he can begin charging the new rent. After that, if you do not pay the new rent, he can evict you.

2007-11-11 10:57:34 · answer #4 · answered by StephenWeinstein 7 · 0 1

Well the first time you don't pay the full amount, he will give you a 7 day notice to pay or vacate. if you chose not to pay and you are still there, he can start eviction proceeding on you.

Doesn't matter if you don't have a written contract. All the states have similiar laws that state if there is no written lease/contract, it is automatically considered a month to month lease.

2007-11-11 14:45:04 · answer #5 · answered by AJ 7 · 0 0

He has to give you 30 days notice that he is raising rent. If you want you can tell him you are moving at that time. Otherwise he can evict you. You do not determine the rent amount, the property owner does.

2007-11-11 13:10:39 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The landlord can legally raise your rent with proper notice per your state's landlord tenant laws.

The landlord can refuse payment if it is not in full. If you pay the old rent, the landlord can refuse it. He can also accept is as a partial payment and begin the eviction process for the balance due.

2007-11-11 11:49:19 · answer #7 · answered by ? 6 · 2 1

If you payed him by check and he countersigned it to cash it, that is a contract that will stand up in court. It establishes the fact that the two of you have a financial agreement. The more canceled checks you have, the better. And it helps if you filled in the memo portion with the word 'rent'. Some banks don't send you the canceled checks anymore unless you ask for them so you may have to talk to the bank.

2007-11-11 11:11:43 · answer #8 · answered by norseman 3 · 0 1

you'll locate the answer on your employ. it ought to specify the fashion of tenants if he needs to charge more suitable for yet another one, or perhaps if warmth and warm water are blanketed. in the journey that they are blanketed, i think it really is his challenge till the end of the employ. you could call the mayor's workplace or city hall and ask for the phone style of the dept that handles landlord/tenant themes. they're going to be able to recommend on the regulations the position you stay. in case you do not have a employ, the owner can change the words each and each month if he needs, and also you could flow out any month in case you want.

2016-10-24 01:35:17 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

H has to give you a thirty day notcie before he raises your rent and if you don't pay it after that he can file for eviction which takes a month to get to court then you can tell the court you need two more weeks that should give you two and a half months.

2007-11-11 10:46:55 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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