- This topic has 35 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 3 months ago by urbanrealtor.
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August 21, 2009 at 8:06 AM #447944August 21, 2009 at 8:10 AM #448200freshmanParticipant
This kind of property management company won’t do anything, they just bring you to see the property, get your application fee and handle the rental fee for the property owner. If you have any requests or fixes on the property, they will forward to the property owner and let the owner know, it is all up to the owner to do your request or not. They don’t give you any info about the owner. Also, this kind of company likes to bring several groups of renters to see the same property, get all application fees and let the owner to pick one of them. It is no guarantee the renter with highest credit scores can rent the property. It is up to the owner to pick, maybe the owner cares about the renter’s job type, age, race….
If the property management company owns a community of properties, that’s more trustable. You can get the apartment ranking from http://www.apartmentratings.com/ .
August 21, 2009 at 8:10 AM #448017freshmanParticipantThis kind of property management company won’t do anything, they just bring you to see the property, get your application fee and handle the rental fee for the property owner. If you have any requests or fixes on the property, they will forward to the property owner and let the owner know, it is all up to the owner to do your request or not. They don’t give you any info about the owner. Also, this kind of company likes to bring several groups of renters to see the same property, get all application fees and let the owner to pick one of them. It is no guarantee the renter with highest credit scores can rent the property. It is up to the owner to pick, maybe the owner cares about the renter’s job type, age, race….
If the property management company owns a community of properties, that’s more trustable. You can get the apartment ranking from http://www.apartmentratings.com/ .
August 21, 2009 at 8:10 AM #447949freshmanParticipantThis kind of property management company won’t do anything, they just bring you to see the property, get your application fee and handle the rental fee for the property owner. If you have any requests or fixes on the property, they will forward to the property owner and let the owner know, it is all up to the owner to do your request or not. They don’t give you any info about the owner. Also, this kind of company likes to bring several groups of renters to see the same property, get all application fees and let the owner to pick one of them. It is no guarantee the renter with highest credit scores can rent the property. It is up to the owner to pick, maybe the owner cares about the renter’s job type, age, race….
If the property management company owns a community of properties, that’s more trustable. You can get the apartment ranking from http://www.apartmentratings.com/ .
August 21, 2009 at 8:10 AM #447609freshmanParticipantThis kind of property management company won’t do anything, they just bring you to see the property, get your application fee and handle the rental fee for the property owner. If you have any requests or fixes on the property, they will forward to the property owner and let the owner know, it is all up to the owner to do your request or not. They don’t give you any info about the owner. Also, this kind of company likes to bring several groups of renters to see the same property, get all application fees and let the owner to pick one of them. It is no guarantee the renter with highest credit scores can rent the property. It is up to the owner to pick, maybe the owner cares about the renter’s job type, age, race….
If the property management company owns a community of properties, that’s more trustable. You can get the apartment ranking from http://www.apartmentratings.com/ .
August 21, 2009 at 8:10 AM #447418freshmanParticipantThis kind of property management company won’t do anything, they just bring you to see the property, get your application fee and handle the rental fee for the property owner. If you have any requests or fixes on the property, they will forward to the property owner and let the owner know, it is all up to the owner to do your request or not. They don’t give you any info about the owner. Also, this kind of company likes to bring several groups of renters to see the same property, get all application fees and let the owner to pick one of them. It is no guarantee the renter with highest credit scores can rent the property. It is up to the owner to pick, maybe the owner cares about the renter’s job type, age, race….
If the property management company owns a community of properties, that’s more trustable. You can get the apartment ranking from http://www.apartmentratings.com/ .
August 21, 2009 at 9:36 AM #447998urbanrealtorParticipantHere is some practical advice for checking out a rental situation and not getting screwed.
Rental agent:
If you are renting from a rental agent, look them up at http://www2.dre.ca.gov/PublicASP/pplinfo.asp If it is a big company, and you have just some temp as your point of contact, look up the company on that site.Unlicensed/informal agent:
If it is an informal rental agent (like the dude helping you says he is just a friend or something), ask to see something (like an agreement) showing that he is authorized to find a renter and have him show you his ID. Then check to see that the names match (see below for ownership look up). This is less important with licensed agents since their info is public record.Owner:
If it is an owner who is your contact, check the ownership records with the county recorder website or ask a Realtor to look it up.Good luck dude.
August 21, 2009 at 9:36 AM #447660urbanrealtorParticipantHere is some practical advice for checking out a rental situation and not getting screwed.
Rental agent:
If you are renting from a rental agent, look them up at http://www2.dre.ca.gov/PublicASP/pplinfo.asp If it is a big company, and you have just some temp as your point of contact, look up the company on that site.Unlicensed/informal agent:
If it is an informal rental agent (like the dude helping you says he is just a friend or something), ask to see something (like an agreement) showing that he is authorized to find a renter and have him show you his ID. Then check to see that the names match (see below for ownership look up). This is less important with licensed agents since their info is public record.Owner:
If it is an owner who is your contact, check the ownership records with the county recorder website or ask a Realtor to look it up.Good luck dude.
August 21, 2009 at 9:36 AM #448068urbanrealtorParticipantHere is some practical advice for checking out a rental situation and not getting screwed.
Rental agent:
If you are renting from a rental agent, look them up at http://www2.dre.ca.gov/PublicASP/pplinfo.asp If it is a big company, and you have just some temp as your point of contact, look up the company on that site.Unlicensed/informal agent:
If it is an informal rental agent (like the dude helping you says he is just a friend or something), ask to see something (like an agreement) showing that he is authorized to find a renter and have him show you his ID. Then check to see that the names match (see below for ownership look up). This is less important with licensed agents since their info is public record.Owner:
If it is an owner who is your contact, check the ownership records with the county recorder website or ask a Realtor to look it up.Good luck dude.
August 21, 2009 at 9:36 AM #447468urbanrealtorParticipantHere is some practical advice for checking out a rental situation and not getting screwed.
Rental agent:
If you are renting from a rental agent, look them up at http://www2.dre.ca.gov/PublicASP/pplinfo.asp If it is a big company, and you have just some temp as your point of contact, look up the company on that site.Unlicensed/informal agent:
If it is an informal rental agent (like the dude helping you says he is just a friend or something), ask to see something (like an agreement) showing that he is authorized to find a renter and have him show you his ID. Then check to see that the names match (see below for ownership look up). This is less important with licensed agents since their info is public record.Owner:
If it is an owner who is your contact, check the ownership records with the county recorder website or ask a Realtor to look it up.Good luck dude.
August 21, 2009 at 9:36 AM #448250urbanrealtorParticipantHere is some practical advice for checking out a rental situation and not getting screwed.
Rental agent:
If you are renting from a rental agent, look them up at http://www2.dre.ca.gov/PublicASP/pplinfo.asp If it is a big company, and you have just some temp as your point of contact, look up the company on that site.Unlicensed/informal agent:
If it is an informal rental agent (like the dude helping you says he is just a friend or something), ask to see something (like an agreement) showing that he is authorized to find a renter and have him show you his ID. Then check to see that the names match (see below for ownership look up). This is less important with licensed agents since their info is public record.Owner:
If it is an owner who is your contact, check the ownership records with the county recorder website or ask a Realtor to look it up.Good luck dude.
August 21, 2009 at 12:06 PM #447731djcParticipantThanks for the replies everyone.
urbanrealtor,
the company showed up in the link you sent and no comments or disiplinary action is listed. Thanks for the link!
August 21, 2009 at 12:06 PM #448071djcParticipantThanks for the replies everyone.
urbanrealtor,
the company showed up in the link you sent and no comments or disiplinary action is listed. Thanks for the link!
August 21, 2009 at 12:06 PM #448140djcParticipantThanks for the replies everyone.
urbanrealtor,
the company showed up in the link you sent and no comments or disiplinary action is listed. Thanks for the link!
August 21, 2009 at 12:06 PM #448322djcParticipantThanks for the replies everyone.
urbanrealtor,
the company showed up in the link you sent and no comments or disiplinary action is listed. Thanks for the link!
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