Renting Guide
Whether you’re moving out from your parents, cities or even new to the country.
Finding a place to rent can be excruciating. Room Renter is here to help!
Here are a couple tips and guides to help you make your transition smoother.
Here are a couple tips and guides to help you make your transition smoother.
What Makes a Boarding House?
A boarding house is defined as residential premises containing one or more boarding rooms along with facilities for communal use, and occupied or intended by the landlord to be occupied by at least 6 tenants at any one time.
What Makes a Boarding House?
- A boarding house tenancies are different to standard tenancies. Even though boarding house tenancies and standard tenancies share a lot of the same requirements under the Residential Tenancies Act, Some things apply only to boarding houses, such as that Room Renter is able to make house rules.
- A boarding house tenancy is intended to last 28 days or more.
- You can’t have a fixed term tenancy in a boarding house.
- Bond under Room Renters is 3 weeks’ rent.
- Room Renter is responsible for any repairs and security issues.
- Room Renter and you are responsible for overall cleanliness.
- A 3 weeks‘ notice is advised and preferred when ending a tenancy with Room Renters.
- Room Renter and the other tenants can’t interfere with your quiet enjoyment of the premises. You can’t interfere with other tenants quiet enjoyment either.
What Makes a Boarding House?
A boarding house is defined as residential premises containing one or more boarding rooms along with facilities for communal use, and occupied or intended by the landlord to be occupied by at least 6 tenants at any one time.
What You Should Know
- A boarding house tenancies are different to standard tenancies. Even though boarding house tenancies and standard tenancies share a lot of the same requirements under the Residential Tenancies Act, Some things apply only to boarding houses, such as that Room Renter is able to make house rules.
- A boarding house tenancy is intended to last 28 days or more.
- You can’t have a fixed term tenancy in a boarding house.
- Bond under Room Renters is 3 weeks’ rent.
- Room Renter is responsible for any repairs and security issues.
- Room Renter and you are responsible for overall cleanliness.
- A 3 weeks‘ notice is advised and preferred when ending a tenancy with Room Renters.
- Room Renter and the other tenants can’t interfere with your quiet enjoyment of the premises. You can’t interfere with other tenants quiet enjoyment either.
A Tenant Must
- Pay all charges for electricity, gas (supplied to the property), metered water (if provided for in the Tenancy Agreement) and telephone.
- Keep the property, including grounds, reasonably clean and tidy.
- Tell the landlord as soon as possible of any damage or repairs needed.
- Repair or pay for repair of any damage caused intentionally or carelessly by the tenant or the tenant’s guests.
- Make sure that any limit set (in the Tenancy Agreement) on the number of people allowed to stay in the property at any one time is adhered to. Note: this does not apply to short term stays by relatives or friends.
- Make sure the property is used primarily for residential purposes.
- Allow the landlord reasonable access to show prospective tenants, buyers or valuers through the property.
- At the end of the tenancy, remove all personal belongings and rubbish, leave the property reasonably clean and tidy, leave lawns and gardens tidy, return all keys, pass cards or other such devices and leave all other chattels belonging to the landlord at the property.
- Pay all charges for electricity, gas (supplied to the property), metered water (if provided for in the Tenancy Agreement) and telephone.
A Tenant Must Not
- Unreasonably refuse the landlord entry when they are entitled to access.
- Intentionally or carelessly damage the property or permit anyone else to do so.
- Use or permit the property to be used for any unlawful purpose.
- Change the locks without the landlord’s permission.
- Interfere with the peace, comfort or privacy of other tenants or neighbors, or permit anyone else at the property to do so.
- Attach any fixture to the property or renovate, alter, or add to the building, except as the Tenancy Agreement allows, or with the landlord’s written permission.
- Sublet or assign (transfer) the tenancy to someone else without the landlord’s permission.