• ares35
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      566 months ago

      i got rent increase notices immediately after every ‘covid check’ was announced.

      • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        196 months ago

        Which is why I plan to never move. My rent has never gone up and I keep printing out and signing extensions. I have the laziest landlord ever. Guy can’t even be bothered to raise my rent since that would involve some level of work on his part.

        • ThyTTY
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          176 months ago

          He may just be satisfied with you as a tenant and doesn’t want to raise the price so you will stay. Not every landlord is a dick.

          Or he’s just lazy as you said.

          • lad
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            66 months ago

            I’d second the “not every landlord is a dick”, some will even lower the rent price when the demand goes down even though I continue to rent, not start a new one.

            But that’s relatively rare, unfortunately

          • @Kepabar@startrek.website
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            26 months ago

            My mother is like this. She rents out her house for under half it’s market value.

            The tenants know they have it good though and do a lot of things that really should be my mother’s responsibility like pay for or do minor repairs when they come up.

            I have told my mom that the needs to raise rent at least some because she’s not saving enough for big things that will come up like roof replacement, but she’s terrified of her tenants leaving.

        • ares35
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          16 months ago

          that’s what we used to have here… stable and very reasonable rent for 20 years, through several ownership changes, even. then this last and current one is just your stereotypical greedy landlord,

      • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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        86 months ago

        Me too! My landlord didn’t even ask if I was impacted by covid, or if I was even still employed… He just raised the rent to a level I’ve never seen before.

      • @quindraco@lemm.ee
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        16 months ago

        Were you not on a lease? Lease contracts always lock your rent in for the time period they’re good for.

        • @ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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          56 months ago

          Some leases lock in yearly increases, though, as part of auto-renewal. The last house I looked to rent included an auto-renewal clause with a fucking 5% annual increase. I noped out even before getting to the part that made me as the renter responsible for replacing the sewer if there was ever a problem with it.

        • ares35
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          6 months ago

          first thing the current landlord did when he bought the building is raise the rent for all tenants… despite everyone having leases–the terms and obligations of existing leases is supposed to transfer to a new owner. but they don’t care, and they 100% would have raised them further (and in addition to the other increases since), had anyone pursued any sort of action against them. we have very little in terms of tenant protection laws here.

          • @quindraco@lemm.ee
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            16 months ago

            How bad is it where you live? Where I’m from that would be a fairly easy small claims court suit for breaxh (or done in bulk, you’d get all the tenants together and do a class action for breach).

    • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      206 months ago

      Man, I went years without a cost of living increase… I told my landlord this, and that same year he raised my rent over 10% with only 60 days notice. That’s illegal in my state on two different levels. I met with an attorney, and the was basically nothing I could do that wouldn’t result in me needing to move out.

      At the time, the rent was really bad in the city. I could find a comparable place to live, but the moving cost and hassle was too high.

      This is how landlords do whatever the fuck they want and get away with it.

      • @abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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        16 months ago

        It’s the free country thing. Typical rental leases renew every year (and typically, renters like that freedom). A landlord can simply decline to renew if you’re “too much trouble”.

        So you could challenge the illegal rent increase in court and win, but then he declines to renew. You could refuse to pay the illegal increase (doing it the right/legal way) and/or even just stop paying rent. But then he eventually evicts you, or just declines to renew.

        In the end, rent is supposed to be temporary. And when it is temporary enough that moving out can be your leverage, it works. If you are settling down somewhere, it really should be owned.