Jump to content

Recommended Posts

You tend to ask for a guarantor when the tenant fails the credit reference. Usually this is due to employment status, bad credit rating etc.


Anyone over 18 can be a guarantor. As a Landlord you want someone that has a good credit rating. Ideally somebody who has a permanent job and owns property/assets - ie someone who wouldn't wish to get a bad credit rating and can afford to pay the tenants rent!


An employer is highly unlikely to act as guarantor, to be a guarantor is a significant obligation. A guarantor is just as liable as the tenant for the debt.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490171
Share on other sites

I also recently helped a tenant bring a landlord to court and the letting agency they used after the landlord behaved illegally with regards to late payment of rent, including harassment of the guarantor.


At the end of the day, if you rent property, as with any business, there is a risk that you won't get paid sometimes.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490207
Share on other sites

Good for you DJKillaQueen. I've had a landlord harassing me before for because he thought I hadn't paid the rent. He knew I was a young female, lived on my own, and was in a vulnerable predicament but threatened to throw me out if I didn't provide proof of payment, told me he was not going to renew my contract (which he knew he was entitled to do) and kept calling me on my mobile. And I had paid my rent! He was obviously raking so much money in that he couldn't keep track of the odd ?600!


new mother- if asking for a guarantor, you just need someone with a stable job and income and who gets a good credit reference. Please don't ask for someone who owns a property- not all people own a property in London. Nobody I know well who would be my guarantor does, including my parents but that certainly doesn't leave them on shaky grounds to be my guarantor. So in doing that you're excluding some tenants being able to rent the property who will most likely be good tenants.


Most agents ask for someone earning a certain amount depending on the amount of rent the tenant will be paying. For example, ?23k for ?700 a month or something like that. A guarantor is also quite good for someone whose self employed if they haven't sorted their taxes yet.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490235
Share on other sites

All comes down to risk..... If a guarantor has assets they are a safer bet. Still potentially takes a number of months and legal costs to go through the courts.


As a LL you need to be able to pay all the bills, mortgage, insurance etc in the absence of receiving rent in addition to financing the legal costs.


On a positive note, I've rented a house out for around 8 years now and only had this happen once. I don't think it's particularly common just something to be aware of since the knock on effect could be significant depending on LL personal circumstances.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490243
Share on other sites

new mother - You look at who the tenant is in terms of risk and assess whether you feel confident enough to run without a guarantor.


I have a single Mum as a tenant who needed council assistance for her deposit and first month's rent, so I asked for a guarantor, who turned out to be the tenant's Mother. This was a sensible approach seeing as the single Mum worked part-time on extremely low wages.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490249
Share on other sites

You can ask the tenants to suggest a guarantor? It's usually a family member since they'd be liable for however much rent the fixed term is for - if you think even a studio flat could be ?1000/month so over a 12 month contract, they'd be liable for ?12000 if the tenant did a bunk. I can't see an employer signing up for that!


My brother was my guarantor for a flat I got straight out of Uni when I failed the credit check. He of course had to pass a credit check - no point using a guarantor if they're also a financial risk...


If the tenants pass the credit check, I don't see why you would need a guarantor. I certainly wouldn't now expect to need a guarantor as a solvent adult.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490295
Share on other sites

In the case I describe above I did not do credit checks it was someone with low income and she asked if I'd accept her Mother as guarantor. I had no issue with that, she'd 8 years in a previous place with good recommendations from previous landlord who was demolishing the property due to subsidence.

No credit checks at all, went by instinct and referrals.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19985-guarantors/#findComment-490319
Share on other sites

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

    • Alas, poor Toadflax!  And gentle Alkanet.
    • Generally wild flowers which are indigenous to the UK are more likely to be supporting more wild life than introduced species, more commonly found in gardens, simply because wild life hasn't had time to adapt to it. Although of course many introductions which flower will be supporting pollinators more generally. (This would also be true of native as opposed to introduced tree and scrub species). And I suspect plants which are flowering over public space, even if rooted on private private, are being removed to stop them setting seed in public space. [Although many might see that as a good thing if the plants have merits of their own).
    • Good question. I think the benefit of some wild flowers is that they appear earlier in the spring and provide nectar for insects coming out of hibernation. Also, natives have evolved with the insects, some of which can only survive with certain native plants. For example, some species of  caterpillars need a specific native plant for their food. Having said that, I've seen lots of pollinators having a field day on some non native flowers. My bees love my verbena bonariensis for example.
    • Genuine question- are wild flowers/weeds better for wildlife than cultivated flowers? My cultivated flowers and their seeds attract birds, bees and all kinds of insects, maybe more so than wild flowers.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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