I know the times are tough and this is probably a widespread problem but................
What say you?

Moderators: greatmutah, GuitarBilly
Slobber Rod wrote: I got my hand stuck in my ass
~Abstract~ wrote:How the fuck does someone have enough brains to acquire a second property...but not enough brains to know who to keep out of said property?
How the fuck does someone have enough brains to acquire a second property...but not enough brains to know who to keep out of said property?
I'd get a Huuuuuuge security deposit and make sure the insurance is paid.
At that point, who gives a fuck. If they skip town, you got a huge amount of dough for free.
If they burn it down, it's insured.
Drive by once a week and keep an eye on their progress in fucking your house up.
indienoise wrote:Is property management your primary source of income? If it's kinda what you do, I guess you could stand to take the risk.
Are you trying to get out of a house you're currently living in, or are otherwise personally, financially tied to? No, no, no, NO! I went that route with someone who was a relatively good risk and it still cost me over 10 grand and set me back 4 years, so far, in the housing department.
Elbutcho wrote:Thanks for the advice guys...........just looking for a little help guiding my decision and wanted to see if any of you had similar situations and how it played out.....I'm sure there are people with bad credit are not irresponsible and maybe just got caught up in this fucked up economy.......I asked her to explain these blemishes on her credit..............most of them are not recent only 2 the rest are 5 or more years old
benjamin801 wrote:Speaking from the other side of this discussion for a minute:
In 2010, my then-fiancee (now wife) and I were the renters with bad credit. I had a 2005 bankruptcy on my records in the wake of my divorce, and she had been a struggling single mom (widowed) basically forever, and had defaulted on a rental agreement at one point in the mid-2000s. Even though by that point in 2010 I had a steady, well-paying job and had been squeaky clean since the Chapter 7, and she was freshly graduated from nursing school (and thus eminently employable), we looked horrible on paper.
The one shitty apartment complex that would have us demanded first and last months' rent upfront, and the deposit was a half month's rent as well on top of that. We bit down hard, took it, spent a year among absolute ghetto trash, and hopped to a better situation exactly a year later, with our year of perfect rental history in hand.
Moral of the story? We were solid people who looked bad on paper because of some old circumstances (in her case) and old mistakes (in mine). The landlord who took a chance on us made pretty damn sure to leave no way to get burned by us, we took it gratefully and used it as the hand up that it was. You could do a lot worse than to follow their example.
benjamin801 wrote:Speaking from the other side of this discussion for a minute:
In 2010, my then-fiancee (now wife) and I were the renters with bad credit. I had a 2005 bankruptcy on my records in the wake of my divorce, and she had been a struggling single mom (widowed) basically forever, and had defaulted on a rental agreement at one point in the mid-2000s. Even though by that point in 2010 I had a steady, well-paying job and had been squeaky clean since the Chapter 7, and she was freshly graduated from nursing school (and thus eminently employable), we looked horrible on paper.
The one shitty apartment complex that would have us demanded first and last months' rent upfront, and the deposit was a half month's rent as well on top of that. We bit down hard, took it, spent a year among absolute ghetto trash, and hopped to a better situation exactly a year later, with our year of perfect rental history in hand.
Moral of the story? We were solid people who looked bad on paper because of some old circumstances (in her case) and old mistakes (in mine). The landlord who took a chance on us made pretty damn sure to leave no way to get burned by us, we took it gratefully and used it as the hand up that it was. You could do a lot worse than to follow their example.
benjamin801 wrote:Speaking from the other side of this discussion for a minute:
In 2010, my then-fiancee (now wife) and I were the renters with bad credit. I had a 2005 bankruptcy on my records in the wake of my divorce, and she had been a struggling single mom (widowed) basically forever, and had defaulted on a rental agreement at one point in the mid-2000s. Even though by that point in 2010 I had a steady, well-paying job and had been squeaky clean since the Chapter 7, and she was freshly graduated from nursing school (and thus eminently employable), we looked horrible on paper.
The one shitty apartment complex that would have us demanded first and last months' rent upfront, and the deposit was a half month's rent as well on top of that. We bit down hard, took it, spent a year among absolute ghetto trash, and hopped to a better situation exactly a year later, with our year of perfect rental history in hand.
Moral of the story? We were solid people who looked bad on paper because of some old circumstances (in her case) and old mistakes (in mine). The landlord who took a chance on us made pretty damn sure to leave no way to get burned by us, we took it gratefully and used it as the hand up that it was. You could do a lot worse than to follow their example.
Redbowties88 wrote:As a businessman? Fuck No.
I'm a landlord by profession. I own/run a small family built mobile home park.
We try to help people out with bad credit when we can. Times are bad for individuals and businesses alike....we try to make decesions more on a personal feel though and also while considering just how bad their accounts are. References are a big help, this is a small town so if you can come up with a reference I know and trust I generally take their word for it.
To be perfectly honest I've rented to people who were scumbags with perfect credit and people with no credit who paid early every month and were the sweetest people on earth. More times then not though when taking a chance on someone you're going to get burned. So take the risk knowing full well the time and cost involved in an eviction that you will NEVER recover from these people.