How to prepare for a rental inspection
Most Australians will rent a home at some point in their lives and, if you do, it‘s inevitable that you‘re going to experience a rental inspection … or several.
Rental inspections can cause tenants a lot of unnecessary stress simply because many people don‘t know what to expect or what‘s expected of them.
Here are a few easy ways to prepare for your rental inspection, so you pass with flying colours and score another year on your lease.
1. Start preparing early
Landlords and agents are required by law to provide at least 24 hours notice before an inspection but most will give you at least a weeks notice.
As soon as you know when your rental inspection is booked in, start to do little things to prepare for it. Clean the shower one day, sweep the front porch another.
As soon as you know when your rental inspection is, start to do little things to prepare for it.
It‘s much easier to clean incrementally, rather than spend an entire evening exhausting yourself scrubbing the place from top to bottom.
2. If you’ve been allowed pets
Rental inspections can be very stressful for pets, especially if you‘re not present while the landlord or agent is there.
Arrange for your pets to visit a friend or family member for the day and save them the stress of having strangers trampling around inside their house.
3. List issues to discuss
Rental inspections aren‘t only for the benefit of the landlord, they‘re also an excellent opportunity for you to let them know about any ongoing maintenance problems that you have that are not your responsibility.
For example, if the toilet keeps blocking or if there‘s a dodgy light fitting that keeps blowing light bulbs – these are structural problems that need be taken care of by the landlord and as a tenant it‘s your responsibility to inform of them of these issue.
However if you smash a window because you were playing indoor football, that‘s your responsibility.Â
4. Clean properly
If you like where you live, you‘re happy with the rent and the landlords are practically non-existent (dream renter’s scenario) then you should be doing everything within your power to stay there – which means doing a brilliant cleaning job on the property you‘re renting.
This means scrubbing in the corners of the shower screen, giving all the windows a good clean, spot cleaning the carpets and maintaining the garden.
You don‘t need to be on your hands knees scrubbing at the kitchen tiling with a toothbrush but both a landlord and an agent will be impressed if you keep their property extra clean and it will certainly influence a decision to keep you on as a tenant.
5. Do any necessary minor repairs
Here I am talking about things like dings in walls, carpet stains or blown lightbulbs.
There seems to be a bit of a grey area with whose responsibility it is to fix things in the home but a good rule of thumb is that if it‘s your ‘fault‘ you need to fix it.
It‘s not the landlords problem that you slammed your couch into her wall and it‘s also not her problem that you spilled a glass of red wine on the carpet. If there‘s a problem with the structure of the building, like plumbing or electrics, the landlord needs to take care of that.
6. If there’s a garden, look after it
Gardens and landscaping are a huge investment of time and money for landlords, which is why they‘re often so strict about the maintenance of the gardens on their properties.
Landlords will strongly favour tenants who do a good job of maintaining the landscaping, so make sure you keep everything watered, fed, happy and trimmed so it looks good for the rental inspection. Make sure you keep everything in the garden watered, fed, happy and trimmed.
7. Don‘t freak out
Rental inspections are not designed for the landlord or real estate agent to berate you and kick you out of their house.
Most rental inspections last about 10Â minutes and consist of the agent doing a quick turn around the property to check for any major damage or potential problems.
It‘s honestly not a big deal and definitely not worth getting stressed over. Clean your place up, make sure they can get inside the property and just chill out.
Source:Â Carly Jacobs