AUSTIN: 512-GO-SULTHAR (512-467-8584)
DALLAS: 972-SULTHAR (972-785-8427)
FORT WORTH: 817-GO-SULTHAR (817-467-8584)
NEW OWNERS: 888-4SULTHAR (888-478-5842)

10 Things to Help Your Rental Business Run Smoothly

  • Screen Tenants: Don't rent to anyone before checking credit history, references, and background. Haphazard screening and tenant selection too often results in problems -- a tenant who pays the rent late or not at all, trashes your place, or lets undesirable friends move in. Use a written rental application to properly screen your tenants.
  • Get it in Writing: Be sure to use a written lease or month-to-month rental agreement to document the important facts of your relationship with your tenants -- including when and how you handle tenant complaints and repair problems, notice you must give to enter a tenant's apartment, and the like.
  • Handle Security Deposits Properly: Stay on top of maintenance and repair needs and make repairs when requested. If the property is not kept in good repair, you'll alienate good tenants, and tenants may gain the right to withhold rent, repair the problem and deduct the cost from the rent, sue for injuries caused by defective conditions, and/or move out without needing to give notice.
  • Make Repairs: Stay on top of maintenance and repair needs and make repairs when requested. If the property is not kept in good repair, you'll alienate good tenants, and tenants may gain the right to withhold rent, repair the problem and deduct the cost from the rent, sue for injuries caused by defective conditions, and/or move out without needing to give notice.
  • Provide Secure Premises: Don't let your tenants and property be easy marks for a criminal. Assess your property's security and take reasonable steps to protect it. Often the best measures, such as proper lights and trimmed landscaping, are not that expensive.
  • Provide Notice Before Entering: Learn about your tenants' rights to privacy; see Repairs, Maintenance, and Entry to Rented Premises. Notify your tenants whenever you plan to enter their rental unit, and provide as much notice as possible, at least 24 hours or the minimum amount required by state law.
  • Disclose Environmental Hazards: If there's a hazard such as lead or mold on the property, tell your tenants. Landlords are increasingly being held liable for tenant health problems resulting from exposure to environmental toxins in the rental premises.
  • Obtain Insurance: Purchase enough liability and other property insurance. A well designed insurance program can protect you from lawsuits by tenants for injuries or discrimination and from losses to your rental property caused by everything from fire and storms to burglary and vandalism.
  • Resolve Disputes: Try to resolve disputes with your tenants without lawyers and lawsuits. If you have a conflict with a tenant over rent, repairs, your access to the rental unit, noise, or some other issue that doesn't immediately warrant an eviction, meet with the tenant to see if the problem can be resolved informally. If that doesn't work, consider mediation by a neutral third party, often available at little or no cost from a publicly funded program.
  • Retain the Services of a Property Manager: A thorough property manager will ensure that your investment properties are taken care of, while allowing you to enjoy the benefits of your rental property business without having to deal with your tenants on a day to day basis. Your property manager will also aggressively market your property to get it leased as quickly as possible. Having a property manager on your side will guarantee that the above recommendations will be handled properly.

    If you or someone you know is looking to buy, sell, rent a home or in need of Property Management services in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex, please contact Sulthar Properties LLC at 817-803-3393. Please click here to get a free quote.