growstuff
JenniferEccles
I’m perfectly sure you know exactly what I mean by tenants trashing a property before they are evicted growstuff.
It most certainly isn’t normal wear and tear.
Touch wood we have been lucky over the years with our tenants but it is the fear of inadvertently getting a rogue one which persuaded us to take out the rent guarantee insurance, even though that (unlike the rent we charge) most definitely does go up every year.
What price peace of mind though?
No, I have no idea what trashing a property means. Thinking about my own house, I really don't know what I could do to trash it.
As I wrote, the landlord knows he would have to redecorate, lay new carpets and buy new white goods when I leave. If he has had any sense, he's been putting away 15% over 8 years of my rent to pay for that (approx £12,000). I'm obliged to pay for professional cleaning or have the amount deducted from my damage deposit. The walls would all be washed down/redecorated anyway and the landlord needs to factor that in to his tax deductible expenses.
I guess the house next door to me was trashed rather than left in a “ used condition”. My neighbour died during the first lockdown and her daughter decided to let it straight away fully furnished rather than renovate it first due to the logistics of living hundreds of miles away in a pandemic.
The tenant, a mother with 18 year old son moved in and all was well at first, I chatted to her over the fence and she seemed pleasant enough. She obviously had a job as I saw her leaving in her car each morning and her son was at home all day, working from home at the local 6th college. After the summer, things began to change, the garden was totally neglected and two scrap cars were parked on the front lawn. They got a very large dog which kept jumping into my garden so I had to have higher fences installed. I noticed that the curtains were never open and looked quite shabby with tears and dirt on them.
I did not have any means of contacting the owners but luckily the neighbours did not bother me, they were not noisy and did not appear to have many visitors so I was unaware of any problems. However, after a year, the tenants left as the new owners were ready to modernise and sell the property. That’s when the full picture emerged, the interior of the house was in an appalling state, not just wear and tear. There was a dart board on one wall with hundreds of holes where darts had been thrown, the lounge carpet was sticky with spilt beer and covered with takeaway boxes and partially eaten food. The dog had been kept in the spare bedroom and allowed to soil the carpet, which stank, and had scratched the door and walls very badly. The kitchen worktops had burn marks from hot pans and for some reason there was a hole in the floorboards exposing the floor space below. Rubbish had been pushed through this hole to partially fill the floor space and there was evidence of mice and also maggots in the food waste down there. I’m not going to describe the state of the bathroom!
I know the new owner was planning to replace the kitchen and bathroom but holes in doors, floors and walls, rotten floorboards underneath the soiled carpets, light fittings hanging off, mouldy rubbish in the floor space etc was not just wear and tear - that was a trashed house!