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Dodgy landlord guide to breaking the law By Simon Thompson |
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Landlords battling to repel increasing red tape despite offering decent homes at a fair price to tenants are often let down by a few outlandish rogue landlords.
The latest unnamed miscreant has been unveiled by London home hunter Laura Evelyn who revealed his idiosyncratic and unreasonable demands of tenants on Twitter.
Not only are his house rules overbearing – but his threats of instant eviction and additional charges are illegal.
Here are some of the 31 demands:
• Don’t bring any pork in to the house
• A 15 minute time limit on showers at certain times of day
• A 30 minute time limit on cooking – with the doors open or a ‘as I feel’ charge for new wallpaper
• Leaving dishes in the kitchen sink will trigger a £15 charge
• Noisy people get a chance to calm down or face instant eviction and loss of their deposit
• No guests without verbal and written consent
• No guest can stay over without giving the landlord two weeks’ notice
• No additional heating allowed in rooms
• No food in rooms or a cleaner will be brought charging £15 per hour
• No personal property in communal areas or the landlord will throw it out as rubbish
The full list was given in writing to prospective tenants at an unidentified London shared house in multiple occupation where the landlord lives on the premises.
Of course, imposing charges not specified in a tenancy agreement, instant eviction and withholding deposits for no good reason are all well-documented offences that no reasonable landlord would inflict on a tenant.
Laura, an actress, did not sign up to rent the room, and broadcast the details on her Twitter page (@lauraevelyn1) which she rues has garnered her more attention under #dodgylandlord than all her publicity and performance efforts as an actress.
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Landlords warned - prepare for more regulation |
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Landlords in England are being warned that they should prepare for more regulation after the government published a consultation.
The warning comes from Tim Miles who is a partner at law firm Clarke Willmott.
He says that the Government is cons |
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Research reveals that 2017’s rents fell in real terms |
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The rents being paid to landlords in all parts of the UK fell in real terms during 2017, research suggests.
The findings from HomeLet reveal that rents in November rose by 0.7%.
That's the 11th straight month that rent increases have fallen beh |
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Rents for the UK’s rental properties rise by 2.1% |
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The average rent for a buy to let property grew by 2.1% in the year to September, an index has revealed.
The figures from HomeLet show that the average rent now being paid is £927 every month.
For landlords in London, rents rose by 1.9% o |
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Landlords start exiting the buy to let sector |
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One leading firm of letting agents is warning that buy to let investors are beginning to exit the sector.
The warning comes from Belvoir who say that while the numbers of landlords leaving is not huge, there is a trend appearing.
The firm's chi |
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Landlord confidence takes a knock |
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Despite the prospect of high yields and profitability, a survey has revealed the landlord confidence around the UK has fallen.
The findings from BM Solutions looked at all the key indicators for the second quarter of 2017.
They say that the lev |
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Landlords 'don't know what tenants want' |
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Landlords in the private rental sector are out of touch with their tenant’s wants and needs, according to new research.
The findings from an online letting agent revealed that tenants are clear most often about what they want and t |
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