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Help Residents Transition

How to Help Residents Transition from Apartment Living to a Single-Family Residence

Every year, one in every six Americans moves, and the average American moves 11.7 times in his/her lifetime. With such regular mobility, there’s a good chance that people will spend significant time living in apartments, but at some point, may lease a single-family residence.

help residents transition

For many, the transition from apartment to single-family houses may be easy enough, but issues that are taken care of in an apartment community are many times the responsibility of the resident in a single-family residence lease.  As the owner of a single-family rental home, you should discuss these differences with residents prior to their moving in. Listed below are some important aspects you should discuss with any potential renter. Although many of these aspects may seem obvious to you as a property owner, these may be foreign to a first-time single family home tenant.

It’s highly unlikely that while living in an apartment a resident ever performed, or even thought about, yard care. As such, upon moving into a single-family house, they may assume that the yard care is taken care of by the property owner. However, this often is not the case, when they move into your rental home, make sure to specify what their responsibilities are. In particular, residents moving from an apartment to single family housing might need to be told step by step what is expected with regard to lawn care. This should include lawn care costs, frequency, as well as mowing, watering, weeding and any other items that will need to be tended to by the renter. Another option is that you may need to connect them with a local yard care company, although even with this option, you should encourage them to understand basic yard care aspects so that they can save some money rather than calling a specialist every time the yard needs sprucing up. Alternately, you could hire landscape care and add the cost to the monthly rent.

help residents transition

Another aspect to discuss are utility bills. For many apartment rentals, gas, water, electricity, cable, and internet bills or any portion thereof may be included as part of the rental payment. However, this may not be the case for your rental home, and so you should discuss the renter’s responsibility and where to set up accounts, along with penalties to the lease if the utilities are ever disconnected.

Also, discuss plumbing issues. While apartments have interconnected plumbing, in a single-family home, the entire plumbing system is used exclusively by the tenants. Therefore, they must understand how the system works (do you have a septic tank?) and whom to call in case there is need of repair. They should also obtain toilet and sink plungers and know how to correct basic blockage in both the toilets and sinks. This is especially important if the repair is necessitated by the renters negligent actions (toothbrush in the toilet, improper use of garbage disposal etc.).

 

Apartment housing has significantly different lighting needs, and much, if not all, is taken care of by the apartment management, including in many cases, light bulbs. However, when it comes to single family homes, you should advise the new resident not only about their responsibility to change the bulbs indoors, but also for the outdoor lights, such as the driveway and the yard.

These factors await residents who move from apartments into single family homes. With the guidance and direction from the landlord, or professional property management firms such as Real Property Management, the resident’s transition will be seamless and hassle free. Want to learn more about helping your new resident transition from apartment to single family housing? Contact your nearest Real Property Management office.

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