Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Moved down from the NW many moons ago. Kept a terrace up there with a long term let to a family. Should have cashed in years ago. When vacated had to spend several grand on repairs and a refresh. Couldn't sell so let it through the Estate Agents who also managed the tenancy. Tenants did a runner a week ago leaving rubbish and lost of damage after only 5 months.


What was the point of using an agent? Was the vetting carried out properly? Did they regularly inspect the property. Not getting much sense out of them.


Be interested in hearing good and bad experiences of letting agents. Note this is not in London, rents are a quarter, hence agents have lower income and probably pay for lower caliber of staff. No abuse of BTL landlords please - I've had enough abuse from tenants!

If the rent is paid, and there are no complaints from neighbours or the council, then there would be no reason to inspect the property outside the terms of the lease (usually when re-signing a renewal, for gas check etc).


Otherwise tenants are considered to have the right to privacy and 'quiet enjoyment' of the property, without undue intrusion by the owner or letting agent.


The legal requirement for management of the property should be outlined in the agreement you have with the letting agent.


Sorry you had a bad experience, hope it's sorted quickly. xx

you should check references of previous accommodation, references for ability to pay (check if arrears with previous landlord), take a deposit to cover any damages, undertake regular inspections


Agency would really only provide the tenant (you'd want to check what references they take) and/ or be available for any maintenance, collection of rent - this depends on your agreement and what you're paying them for.


I've also been stung by nasty tenants.

All you need to know about agents is contained in one piece of small print in just about every agreement. That is the bit that says that, even if the tenants fails to pay the rent, you still have to pay the percentage agreed for management.


That's sums up the lack of confidence they have in their own service.

Rosetta Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I think the best thing is to go for landlord insurance; the company does all the checks on the

> tenants. Join the National Landlord's Association for help.


All the LL insurance I've seen doesn't do any checks. They do, however, demand you do them if you want rent cover.

Thanks all.


It just took me by surprise, having seen a wide range of tenants in the past.


I used to deal with students years ago, having once been one myself I thought that I would know what to expect. Surprised at times, but many of the surprises were good ones.


I hadn't expected this from a 'profesional' person with a kid who'd supplied all the references etc.


As for tenancy agreements and 'quiet enjoyment' I always gave notice of visiting and 99% of the time this was fine. Ho hum.

Too far away to manage reliably. Crappy local estate agents on small time commission + bad tenants is not a good combo. You need to either take greater interest in tenant selection, be involved and meet them yourself or sell the place and cut your losses. You CAN sell it just perhaps not at the price you'd like but there's no shame in taking a hit, licking your wounds and moving on without the hassle of owning it. Then unless you're in negative equity use any gains to pay off your existing mortgage or invest it in an index tracker fund which will likely help you get money back over long term. BTL no longer makes sense with new taxes.


I would just sell it mate and move on.

I don't agree that BTL doesn't make sense with the new taxes, maybe so for newcomers or those poorly leveraged.

Why don't you speak to an accountant and look at your options, find out what the tax implications are if you continue to rent, what your CGT liabilities are if you sold etc...

Hmmmm a quick sum tells me BTL only really works if you have 60%+ equity, a gross yield greater than about 7%, a low BTL mortgage rate and perhaps a corporate structure to run it through. Losing mortgage interest relief is massive for many amateur LL's.

I don't think this is the thread for a boring debate on the impact of BTL in London which has seen a leveraged minority prosper at the expense of the less wealthy, non-property owning masses and widened the gulf yet further between the haves and have nots. And I say that as a former BTL landlord who benefited. My view is that given the impact on society second properties should be more highly taxed and not allowed to be just another asset class like bonds or equities.


Anyway...Malambu...sell that flat in Liverpool bro

Been trying to sell it for two years thanks. Put tenants in as otherwise I'd continue to pay council tax and the place would have got damp. There is only so much of a hit you can take. Surely some of you have kids going to Liverpool to study - here is a great chance to save on rent!


It's a rather sad state of affairs. Some lovely housing stock but depopulation from the 70s coupled with loss of manufacturing has hit hard. Its still a lovely place but many of the middle classes rather than move to the equivalent of East Dulwich would rather move out to Cheshire or the Wirral. BTL and purpose built halls have saturated the student market.


Not after a sympathy vote just explaining that outside of our London bubble the world can be very different.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • OMFG is it possible for the council to do anything without a bunch of armchair experts moaning about it? The library refurb is great news, as it's lovely but completely shagged out - the toilets don't even work reliably. Other libraries in the area will be open longer house during the closure. July is a rubbish time to begin a refurb because it's just before the entire construction sector goes on summer holiday, and it would mean delaying the work another 8 months.
    • Licensing application for 2026 has gone in and they want to extend the event from 4 to 7 days accross two weekends.  There are some proposed significant changes to be aware of:   Event proposal moves to two separate weekends Number of days of the festival moves from 4 to 7 meaning also a change in the original licence is required Expected footfall in the park over the two weekends around 60,000.    Dear Peckham Rye Park Stakeholder,   Re: STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION – event application: ‘GALA and On The Rye Festival 2026’ – ref: SWKEVE000935   We are writing to you because you have previously identified yourself as someone who wishes to be informed about event applications for Peckham Rye Park, or we think that you might have an interest in knowing about this particular event application.   Please be aware that the council are in receipt of an event application for: GALA and On The Rye Festival 2026’   In line with the council’s Outdoor Events Policy and events application process we are carrying out consultation regarding this application.   The following reference documents are attached to this email:   Consultation information APPENDIX A – site plan weekend 1 APPENDIX B – site plan weekend 2 APPENDIX C – Production Schedule APPENDIX D – 2025 Noise Management Plan   The consultation is open from Tuesday 4 November and will close at midnight on Tuesday 2 December 2025   Community engagement sessions will take place on Wednesday 19 November.   If you would like to comment on application: SWKEVE000935 and take part in the online consultation, please visit:   www.southwark.gov.uk/GALA2026   If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact us.     Kind Regards, Southwark Events Team Environment and Leisure PO Box 64529 London SE1P 5LX 020 7525 3639 @SouthwarkEvents APPENDIX A - SITE PLAN weekend 1.pdf APPENDIX B - SITE PLAN weekend 2.pdf APPENDIX C - PRODUCTION SCHEDULE.pdf And just to add that councillor Renata Hamvas chairs the licensing committee. Worth contacting her with views on ammendments to the original license. I am fairly sure she won't grant any amendments, but just in case.....
    • Second time Aria has completed a plumbing job for me and both times he’s been polite. Communicative, kept to time and completed the job. He’s very helpful and tidy as well. First job was ball valve in water tank, not easy at all. He and his team were fantastic. This time kitchen tap cylinders replaced and tap tightened.  Much appreciated, Aria thank you.
    • Thought others may be interested to help a local community centre help others.    My bank account offers roundup and it’s been growing all year. As well as treating myself or putting it towards a train ticket to see my family I’ve made a donation to the Albrighton. They can use donations at any time but I hope my donation will go towards the Christmas hampers.    Can you support them so they can provide Christmas hampers?   https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/albrightoncommunityfridge?utm_id=1&utm_term=M22JKQb6W   A donation of £50 will pay for a hamper to feed a family over this Christmas period. A donation of £30 will pay for a hamper to feed someone living on their own over the Christmas period.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...