The tenant is responsible for what ever they put up in the unit, first they need to ask the landlord if they have permission, it is a much better idea that the landlord should make all the necessary changes, that way the tenant does not have the responsibility nor the costs. If the landlord declines and the tenant goes ahead anyway, the tenant can leave themselves wide open to be sued for damages if anything goes wrong.
If the tenant has a rental agreement with the owner, the tenant is responsible.
The tenant is responsible for paying rent on time each month.
if you make your property a section 8 property who is responsible for problems that occur on the house
Landlord.
Yes, the co-signer is responsible.
In side the rental unit if an apartment the tenant, Outside the community If a home or Single family the tenant
HUD and the housing authority are not directly responsible for any damages caused by its client tenants. If the tenant damages property, you have the right to evict him just as you would any other tenant. If you take the tenant to court and win the eviction, the tenant will lose his voucher permanently.
Yes, the landlord is responsible. But keep in mind that this is not a landlord/tenant issue: it's a small claims issue. So this is heard in a small claims court inquired, not a landlord/tenant court.
The landlord
tennant
No, not unless the tenant is acting as your agent to help maintain the grounds of your property. Each tenant is responsible for maintaing their own yard and thus must purchase their "tools" to keep said grounds maintained.
If the tenant damaged them, then it's the tenants fault. Ifit was the landlord, then it's their fault