You really should do your homework yourself. What would your teacher think about cheating like this?
And, nobody writes leases like that.
A guide to renting to an apartment would help first timers into preparing themselves. One thing they have to make sure is if they afford a monthly payment. Once that is figured out, then you will use the guide into finding what apartment is right for you.
There are many different references you may need to provide before leasing an apartment. Some credit references could be your car payment, any personal loans or previous landlords.
Yes, but only if the rent amount is going to be the same or less than the payment standards for a one bedroom apartment, and then only if the Housing Authority determines you can afford it, factoring in the utility allowance for a one-bedroom apartment.
Depends on if your apartment community reported to the credit bureau's as being a late payment. Most of the apartments where I have lived, didnt report it when I was a month late. Apartments usually get you if your late constantly or evicted from the apartment. You could ask your landlord if they reported it as being late.
If u pay first and last but didn't sign a lease or didn't move in can u get full payment back
The landlord, or the owner of the building in witch you rented in! Hope I helped! -Gabby
Late Payment on Apartment LeaseA lease will not show on your credit report; unless there was a judgment against you.
No. When the apartment you apply for does a credit check that will show. They will not want to rent to someone who owes a previous apartment complex. Pay the previous bill first or at least make payment arrangements.
Buying an apartment complex is one thing; charging rent is another. No one can force a landlord to allocate any rent received to go toward the loan payment for the complex owner.
The correct way to is to say "make a payment." Your action isn't doing anything besides actually making said payment, so "doing a payment" would be incorrect. To use it correctly in a sentence, an example of this would be "I need to hurry up a make a payment before my landlord takes my apartment away from me."
YES - absolutely...it makes no difference how the payment is made...cash, check, property services, etc...it is taxable income.
The landlord has an obligation to try to rent it. If she cannot, she can sue you for each month, through the end of the lease.
The double payment system is a an internet wealth building system that advertises that they will help you generate an income online.
[Debit] Building account [Credit] Cash / bank
There are a few benefits over renting an apartment versus owning a home. Generally a down payment is needed for a home, a security deposit is needed to rent an apartment. You do not have to pay real estate taxes and you do not have to insure the dwelling, only the contents inside.
A guide to renting to an apartment would help first timers into preparing themselves. One thing they have to make sure is if they afford a monthly payment. Once that is figured out, then you will use the guide into finding what apartment is right for you.
I doubt it: 1099's are for payment of money, not for free services.