Flat Chat Strata Forum Rental rants Current Page

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  • #71868
    dissidiaZac
    Flatchatter

      Hi all, I am thinking of breaking the lease early of the current unit I am staying at.

      As that is my first rental and I am not having much of a good relations with the rental agents, will it be alright if I upload the rental receipts as part of the supporting documents into my realestate account instead of a tenant ledger?

      I don’t want to let the agents know that I am going to break the lease soon, we already have some bad blood going on between us, even so, I wanted to leave on peaceful terms (if it ever will be) if possible. Hence I am not planning to ask them for it until I have officially left the current unit.

      As such, wondering if potential landlords or agents who list out the properties, will they be skeptical about the rental receipts I uploaded which shows I always pay on time?

      In addition, is it also alright to not list the current agents/agency as part of the reference?

      Appreciate in advance for any replies.

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    • #71903
      kaindub
      Flatchatter

        This is not strictly strata related.

        But as a tenant, you cant just decide to break a lease. You are bound by the conditions of the lease until the fixed period expires.

        That means, you can ask to break the lease, and pay any break fees. That could be anything from the rent to the end of the fixed period , down to a few weeks rent . Read your lease.

        If you “break” your lease with the consent of the landlord/agent, then you would not be considered to get a black mark against your name.

        Many times people need to break leases for good reasons (relationship breakup, job change etc) and a good landlord/agent will accept the reason (though you still need to pay the break fee)

        If you just dont like the place or the agent, that is no valid reason to break the lease. Remember that you (should have) inspected the property and interviewed the landlord/agent. What I am saying is that in this case you have no legal aveneues to pursue a lease termination.

        However, you can ask to break the lease with the permission of the landlord and pay any break fees.

        If you go an find another place to live before you have lawfully terminated your current lease, you could find that you are paying two sets of rents.

        Sneaky is not always oggd.

        #71914
        Jimmy-T
        Keymaster

          This is not strictly strata related.

          More than 50 per cent of strata units are rentals, so it kind of is.

          The opinions offered in these Forum posts and replies are not intended to be taken as legal advice. Readers with serious issues should consult experienced strata lawyers.
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