It depends on the landlord. Usually, the just need SS number and photo ID, as well as pay stubs or proof of income. If this is provided, you should be fine
Signing a lease agreement form is up to the person renting an apartment, not the renter. Before signing, a potential renter should understand the terms of the agreement. A good lease offers pretection to both parties.
Not legally
Security can be a compromise in cheap apartments. It's also possible the apartment is cheap for some other flawed reason, or simply because the land lord doesn't live in the area, and thinks it would be easier to get the rent every month if it were cheaper. You need to throughly inspect the apartment before signing any leases and handing over any money.
While hardly polite, it can certainly be done. You'll be in a worse bargaining position however. See http://blog.moneydesktop.com/debt_free/10-ways-to-negotiate-lower-apartment-rent/ for some ideas on valid points you can make for negotiating the rent down. If market rents are falling quick, the landlord may budge. If not, offer to maintain the grounds or manage the building.
Did a court adjudicate the tenant as incompetent? Then, if and when the landlord sues, that would provide the basis for a defense. You can't stop the landlord from trying to recover damages.
Yes.
Signing a lease agreement form is up to the person renting an apartment, not the renter. Before signing, a potential renter should understand the terms of the agreement. A good lease offers pretection to both parties.
Apartmentguide.com does not off a reward for signing a lease. The site is designed in a unique user-friendly format that provides useful and complete information making apartment shopping and renting easier.
Usually proof of income, drivers licence, and sometimes a electric bill to show your former address. The person renting will have a form you fill out and will do a credit check.
No. A cosigner's only obligation is the debt incurred by signing the lending agreement.
No. You should have paid more attention to what you were signing.
Not legally
When the primary borrower defaults the cosigner becomes legally responsible for the loan. If the cosigner is not able to pay the loan he or she can also be subject to legal action by the lender and the cosigner's credit score will be seriously affected.
Yes.
I/You/We/They sign. He/She/It signs. The present participle is signing.
No. You cannot be considered to be a cosigner unless you have signed the loan documents. The bank needs another party to guarantee the loan will be repaid. By signing you agree to pay the loan in full if the primary borrower fails to pay.No. You cannot be considered to be a cosigner unless you have signed the loan documents. The bank needs another party to guarantee the loan will be repaid. By signing you agree to pay the loan in full if the primary borrower fails to pay.No. You cannot be considered to be a cosigner unless you have signed the loan documents. The bank needs another party to guarantee the loan will be repaid. By signing you agree to pay the loan in full if the primary borrower fails to pay.No. You cannot be considered to be a cosigner unless you have signed the loan documents. The bank needs another party to guarantee the loan will be repaid. By signing you agree to pay the loan in full if the primary borrower fails to pay.
Depends on where you live. In Los Angeles there is none. Once you sign the lease you are bound to the terms.