
Choose the Right Letting Agent
Description
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This is an essential guide if you are a property investor considering or already engaging the services of a letting agent. If you are worried about your letting agent pressuring you to take on undesired tenants, being ignorant of the latest regulatory changes, being non-responsive to you or your tenant, not conducting regular inspections, not attending to repairs, charging you hefty fees, being slow in passing on the rent to you, or trapping you with punitive terms and conditions, you can minimise all of these problems by reading this guide.
This guide has been compiled from the authors' own research and experiences of what they have learnt since first using letting agents in 2009, and the experiences of other investors they know. It follows a logical order for establishing and maintaining your letting agent relationship.
The first section describes the different types of letting agents, how they differ in terms of cost and how to create a shortlist of potential agents who fit the minimum regulatory requirements.
The second section provides the key considerations and questions to ask a potential letting agent to help select the agent who is the best fit for your investment.
The third section considers the actions a landlord should take to reduce the risk of problems and potential liabilities, so as to stay protected and compliant even while the property is being managed for you.
The fourth section outlines the process for problem management, to help make problem resolution a smoother and more fruitful process, including strategies to terminate the letting agent relationship.
The fifth section contains case studies where the authors have applied the problem resolution process showing the results obtained and lessons learnt.
Finally, there are appendices which consist of The Letting Agent Questionnaire; Information to Provide to the Tenants and the Problem Resolution Flowchart which compress some of the key points in the guide into useful summaries for the reader.
More details
Person
Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Who this guide is for
- About us
- 1. Choosing Your Potential Letting Agents
- 1.1. The three different types of letting agents
- 1.2. Use your contacts
- 1.3. Use independent resources
- 1.4. The letting agent's website and advertisements
- 1.5. Visit or call the letting agent
- 1.6. Verify the letting agent's credentials
- 1.6.1. Client Money Protection Scheme
- 1.6.2. Consumer redress scheme
- 1.6.3. Professional membership and trade bodies
- Summary
- 2. The Letting Agent Interview
- 2.1. Company background and management
- 2.2. Marketing and tenant finding
- 2.3. Deposit
- 2.3.1. Custodial scheme
- 2.3.2. Insurance-based scheme
- 2.3.3. Deposit replacement product (also known as no-deposit scheme)
- 2.4. Rent
- 2.4.1. Rent reviews
- 2.5. Regulations and changes
- 2.6. Information provided to tenants
- 2.7. Inspections
- 2.8. Repairs and maintenance
- 2.9. Redress scheme and professional affiliations
- 2.10. Relationship with the landlord
- 2.11. Fees and costs
- 2.12. Documents to take away
- 2.12.1. Terms and conditions
- 2.12.2. AST
- 2.12.2.1. Compatibility of the AST with mortgage requirements
- 2.12.2.2. Late rent interest payments
- 2.12.2.3. Rent review
- 2.12.2.4. End of the AST
- 2.12.2.5. Tenants' abandoned goods
- 2.12.2.6. Potentially unfair terms
- 2.12.3. Application form for applicants
- 2.12.4. Inspection report
- Summary
- 3. Protecting Yourself
- 3.1. GDPR
- 3.2. Key documents
- 3.2.1. Right to Rent
- 3.2.2. How to Rent: the checklist for renting in England
- 3.2.3. Annual Gas Safety Certificate
- 3.2.4. Energy Performance Certificate (EPC)
- 3.2.5. Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR)
- 3.2.6. Portable Appliance Testing (PAT)
- 3.2.7. Legionella risk assessment
- 3.2.8. Tenancy deposit protection
- 3.3. Furniture and furnishings fire safety
- 3.4. Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms
- 3.5. Rent protection
- 3.5.1. Rent guarantee insurance
- 3.5.2. Guarantor
- 3.6. Miscellaneous
- Summary
- 4. When Things Go Wrong
- 4.1. Where to get independent advice
- 4.2. Resolving the issue with your letting agent
- 4.3. Making effective formal complaints
- 4.4. Escalating your complaint
- 4.4.1. Escalating complaints to the consumer redress scheme
- 4.4.2. Escalating to the professional bodies
- 4.4.3. Escalating to Trading Standards
- 4.5. Litigation
- 4.6. Terminating the letting agent relationship
- Summary
- 5. Lessons Learnt
- 5.1. Complaints resolved amicably with the agent
- 5.1.1. AST renewal
- 5.1.2. Rent guarantee insurance through the agent
- 5.1.3. Additional occupants identified during the inspection
- 5.1.4. Fence repair
- 5.1.5. Full refund of tenant's deposit without our knowledge and consent
- 5.2. Complaints which needed further escalation
- 5.2.1. Upfront management fees
- 5.2.2. Use of ghost advertisements
- 5.2.3. Failure to perform periodic inspections
- 5.2.4. End of tenancy
- 5.2.5. Non-compliance with HMRC VAT treatment
- 5.2.6. Non-compliance with ICO registration and GDPR
- Summary
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1: The Letting Agent Questionnaire
- Appendix 2: Information to Provide to the Tenants
- Appendix 3: The Problem Resolution Flowchart
- Appendix 4: Useful Websites
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