| Too many agreements are written so all the managent company is supposed to do is send the right amount of money. |
Every so often I get calls and email from landlords who have had trouble with a property management, a company that manages property for several rental property owners, not the onsite variety of manager (though I get calls about them, too). Usually the complaints have to do with the property management company not having done the job the landlord was led to believe it would do. I have responded to complaints such as, "he never checked references, he just rented to anybody," "he let the tenants get away with murder," "he says I have to evict the tenant." After the landlord has started having these problems he or she reads the management agreement and finds out that, contrary to what he or she was led to believe, the management company is not responsible for anything. Too many agreements are written so all the managent company is supposed to do is send the right amount of money, and that's only because it will get into trouble with the real estate agency of the state if it doesn't. After reviewing several property management agreements I have on hand, I came up with a list of clauses and terms that should be in any property management agreement you sign with an outside management company. Due Diligence The professional property manager has an extra duty of diligence, since it has implied, by taking on a management contract, that it is expert in rental property management. Communication and Notification
Accounting One thing to watch out for, though, is when they will send the money. By what day of the month will your check be mailed to you? Will the check be for that month, or will the management company hold back a month? What happens to the security deposit they collect from the tenant? Termination of the Agreement
Repairs Certainly they are not responsible for people over whom they have no control. But they are responsible if they hired someone who has a history of shoddy or dangerous work and they knew or should have known that he did. Evictions and Terminations
of Tenancy What you want is their expertise and their willingness to use it. Always make sure that the property management company will use due diligence in terminating the tenancy of any tenant who must be removed. Will having all these clauses in a management agreement guarantee a smooth relationship with the property management company you hire? Absolutely not. You need to interview and get references from several before you commit to anyone. But not having these clauses in the agreement will almost guarantee you problems. |