I would not think so, sounds pretty raw...definately contact disability advocates in your area first. or if it has happened to you, subtract from upcoming rent until you find out does not ring right.
Yes, in some countries.
In the US, generally, they cannot.
They can charge pet rent and fees for non-service animals, they can ask for a cleaning deposit for all tenants equally, and they can charge for cleanup in a unit if a service animal fouls the carpet or tears up the doors or walls, etc, but they cannot charge extra monthly rent, special fees or even demand pet cleaning deposits for service animals.
Service animals are not pets; pet fees and policies are not permitted to apply to them.
Same goes for Emotional Support Animals.
Two federal regulations establish this; the Fair Housing Act and Americans with Disabilities Act.
justice.gov/crt/fair-housing-act-2
ada.gov
Pets are pets. All pet fees and policies do apply to them.
Check with a local real estate attorney, local magistrate or landlord tenant office for more information. Also see the related link.
can a landlord -- after the due date on rent -- charge 10% fee and an additional fee daily -- in albuquerque new mexico
can a landlord -- after the due date on rent -- charge 10% fee and an additional fee daily -- in the state of new mexico -- in albuquerque new mexico --
No, as a roommate, you cannot charge your roommate more for rent than what the landlord has set. The rent amount is determined by the landlord or the lease agreement, and it is not within your rights to charge a higher amount without the landlord's permission.
Was that supposed to be in English?
Check your local tenant/landlord laws. Generally, they can charge what they want--it is a matter of what the market will bear. They own the property and it is their choice, with some guidelines about exclusions, as to who they will rent to and what the terms of the lease are.
Yes: as long a you are a tenant in a dwelling at the hands of a landlord, you are renting from him and must pay rent.
Only if the tenant is still there.
They cannot charge you ANY additional fees without your consent UNLESS they are written in your lease. Simply inform the leasing agent to point out where in your lease it states all the additional fee information. If they cannot find it, you are not legally required to pay for it.
If there is any damage to the rented property he can get additional money to compensate; otherwise he is limited to the rent owed.
He can if there is no written designation for the rent. I suggest getting a receipt from your landlord if you are suspicious. Think Properties NYC
Yes, the landlord can charge a prorated rent until you, your belongings, and cleaning supplies are physically out of the apartment and you've returned the key.
He could if you lived there those days.