There are many landlords who will not allow tenants to have pets in their rental property which inadvertently makes it harder to locate a home for tenants who have pets. There are a lot of tenants, especially in Hawaii, who have pets. Just by letting prospective tenants know that you open to considering pets, it expands the total number of potential tenants who may have interest in leasing your property. To help offset the additional wear and risk that a property may incur as a result of a pet, an investor can require an additional pet deposit and / or increase the monthly rent.
Articles in this section
- When do I receive my yearly tax paperwork?
- What is included in HappyDoors Property Management services?
- Why do I have to pay GE Taxes?
- What is the purpose of having the utilities turned on when the rental property is empty?
- Why do I need to have HappyDoors Property Management added to my landlord insurance policy?
- Why do you recommend investors to consider pets?
- Why should I need to provide a customary pest treatment?
- Why does HappyDoors Property Management not list a rental property until its move-in ready?
- Why should the property be cleaned professionally prior to a tenant moving-in?
- Can you explain the Transient Accommodations Tax?
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