PROPERTYSPARK ARTICLE
7 Legal Essentials Every Real Estate Agent Should Know About Tenant-Occupied Properties
As an agent, and whether you’re listing a rental property for sale or managing someone’s property, these essentials might just be the concrete tools you need.
Some Legal Essentials Worth Knowing
- The Lease Agreements
- Lease Duration and Their Terms
- Rights of Renewal
- Transfer Clauses
- The Tenant’s Rights During Sale
- Right to Notice
- Right to Occupy
- Right of First Refusal
- Eviction Laws and Procedures
- Just Cause Eviction Requirements
- Notice Periods
- Court Proceedings
- Distinctions Between Landlord and Tenant Responsibilities
- Landlord or Lessor Responsibilities
- Tenant or Lessee Responsibilities
- Handling of the Property’s Security Deposit
- There’s Proper Collection and Holding
- There’s Timely Return
- There’s Transparency in Deductions Made
- Compliance with Fair Housing Ordinances
- Non-discriminatory practices are observed
- There are reasonable accommodations within the property
- Disclosure Requirements
- Existing Leases
- Tenant Issues
- Property Condition
The law created in lease agreements a binding contract where lessees’ and lessors’ actions and responsibilities are to be guided and where compliance is ordained by law.
As a real estate agent, you may need to understand the tenant and owner’s side of the contract, especially their security, like property insurance.
Along the way, you may also need to know what renters insurance cover and other contracts the tenant may have had relative to their rented premises. You may need this info in cases of disputes regarding the property’s sale and other owner-lessor issues.
And, before listing or managing a tenant-occupied property, it’s more advantageous if you can review their existing lease agreement, especially:
Your competent knowledge of these lease provisions can help you manage the expectations of all parties involved and help them avoid breaches of contract.
Apart from reserving a chunk of your budget for marketing, it will boost your expertise as a property broker if you also spend time and resources to research tenants’ rights during the sale of the property, especially those according to your state’s laws, like:
In some instances, tenants are given the first opportunity or priority to buy the property if the owner decides to sell. Knowing these tenant rights and all other provisions about real estate can help you avoid and prevent legal issues and maintain smooth transactions, sales, and client relationships.
Many delicate legal matters, like evictions, are couched with strict guidelines as to how they need to be traversed with care. That’s why, as a real estate agent, you have to be quite informed about:
You may need to understand when and why a tenant can be legally evicted.
Many states require specific notice periods, like 30 to 60 days, before you can initiate eviction procedures.
If eviction issues reach the court, there are specifically detailed steps that you may need to observe and follow, like jurisdictional requirements.
Most state laws have enumerations of ordinances that contain clear distinctions between landlord and tenant responsibilities, like maintenance, repairs, and insurance coverage. That’s why, as their able agent, you need to know what are the:
Your understanding of the boundaries, especially those in their lease contract, can help you address potential buyer concerns and set the right expectations.
Since security deposits are regulated by law, mishandling them can lead to legal disputes and consequences. So, as the real estate agent-in-charge, you need to make sure that:
You need to make sure that everything about the property’s security deposit is laid down on the table. It’s one of the rental concerns that’s quite crucial to maintaining legal compliance and protecting your client’s or the landlord’s interests.
It’s a well-built edict that discrimination due to race, color, religion, sex, familial status, or even disability is prohibited by law, especially the Fair Housing statutes.
So, in your dealings with tenant-occupied properties, you need to make sure that:
Otherwise, you may face significant penalties and damage to your professional reputation if you’re charged with violating the fair housing laws.
You need to be fully transparent when selling tenant-occupied properties and honestly disclose:
Your possible buyers need to be fully informed about ongoing lease agreements and their associated terms.
You need to clearly disclose to prospective buyers, especially those known issues with tenants, like late payments or disputes.
It’s best to disclose property defects or their need for repairs, especially if they affect tenant safety.
Your failure to disclose these essential concerns can lead to serious legal consequences, like court action from buyers or tenants.
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