How to spot the dream tenant as a landlord

Once they’re living in your place, it’s dead easy to spot a bad tenant. They’re usually the ones paying late, causing havoc with the neighbours, treating your place like a tip or demanding endless costly repairs. In short, making your life – and your property manager’s life – hell.

But if you can select a great tenant from the outset, you might also be saving yourself at least 12 months of agony, not to mention a hit to your bottom line.

Mark Kelman, a Sydney-based investor who owns 13 properties, says a good tenant “makes an amazing difference to your property”. He says a reliable tenant will reduce your maintenance costs, minimise wear and tear, look after the garden and effectively stage the property for sale if you decide to put it on the market.

“They’re worth their weight in gold and that’s why you’ve got to do the right thing and look after them and they’ve got to do the right thing and look after the house – and then everything works.”

Sarah Martin, operations manager at Melbourne Property Managers, says lower management fees can often equate to a lower standard of service and cost you in the long run. “Unfortunately you do pay for what you get,” she says. “It’s a massive investment in your life so it’s definitely worth the extra.”

In terms of the dream tenant, Martin says families, households with expectant mums or pet owners are often a good bet for landlords seeking long-term renters. “The wear and tear is probably going to be higher but they do stay longer,” she says. That can save an owner a fortune in re-letting fees, not to mention the cost of having a property sit vacant while you search for new tenants.

Sharon Gallagher, head of the property management department at Ray White Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, says an incomplete rental application form, or a chequered rental history, can be early red flags. “The perfect tenant would be someone that has perfect history,” she says.

However, she says a dream tenant sometimes means different things to different landlords. “One landlord will expect that they have the property perfectly clean and tidy but if they’re always three or four days behind in their rent, they don’t care,” she says. “Another owner would walk in and be OK if the property’s a little bit untidy, but they would expect the rent to be in advance at all times.”

Gallagher says a search of tenancy database TICA by your agent should reveal obvious problems in your prospective tenant’s rental history, such as sloppy payments, major damage, and situations where a share house has gone drastically wrong.
Beyond that, it’s all about good communication – between your agent and tenant, and between you and your agent.

A good agent will dismiss any tenant with a bad reference, and thoroughly check anyone whose application doesn’t seem to add up, she says. 
As for tenants, Gallagher says a dream tenant wil

l tell the agent when maintenance is needed, without demanding the world. “If you’ve got tenants that don’t care, then unfortunately the property suffers as well,” she says.

Source: Domain

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How to spot the dream tenant as a landlord