Friday, September 9, 2011

If landlords allow pets, do they do anything to the apartment once a pet owner moves out?

For example, like pet hair/dander removal or detoxifying of the whole apartment, etc. I am allergic to pets and will be moving soon to a pet-friendly town for college and I am afraid I might move into an apartment and sneeze all the time.|||No they do not.





You need to move to a no pet rental.|||Web sites are a good place to find an apartment or house to rent, if you want to go through the entire list to find one in your state and then city.





The best place to look for places to rent is to go to the yellow pages of your telephone book, look under property managers.





These individuals list properties for rent in certain areas, so make sure you select the areas in which you wish to rent.





Call several of the property managers listed there, tell them you want a list of properties that they have for rent. Some will fax, email or mail the list of local places to rent along with the address, number of bedrooms and bath rooms, amenities available, such as washer and dryers or gyms, the monthly rental of the unit. Most will include a rental application. These list will include the monthly rental required, if a lease or month to month agreement will be signed. They will also indicate if they will accept Section 8 vouchers. They will also indicate it they have disabled access, allow pets and if so the type allowed.





They might indicate a web site that you might visit to get their list of places to rent. It does not cost to get a rental list from a reputable property manager.





Some will require you to stop by their office and pick up the list. A lot of them post their list outside so the list are available 24/7 365.





Make sure you don't fall for the scams and purchase a list as 70%-80% of these list are composed of free list they have compiled. They are not the property managers of any property in most instances.





You might also google Property managers in whatever city or community you want to live in and see what comes up. Again do not pay for this information as it is free from reliable property managers.





I hope this has been of some benefit to you, good luck.





"FIGHT ON"|||It's really up to the landlord but he/she will have to let it out in a tenant-able condition. If I were the landlord, I would expect the pet-owning tenant to return the place in the same clean condition that I have leased it. Otherwise, there is the bond money!|||There will be plenty of rentals where the landlord has never accepted pets; you should be able to find one of those rentals even in a pet friendly college town or look toward a newly constructed rental|||Not unless there was visible damage to the apartment after the pet owner moved out.|||Carpet cleaning and a fresh coat of paint is all you can hope for.|||Then common sense tells you to rent a place that has never allowed pets! Simple!

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