Move out in the middle of the night.
No. You are still under a contractual agreement to fulfill the terms of your lease, no matter who the manager may be. The lease is usually an agreement contract between yourself and the management company who owns the apartment complex, not between yourself and the individual manager.
No. But, you will still be responsible for your share of the previous lease unless the landlord/rental agency (not the the other leasees) agree to release you from your obligation.
All cosigning means is you are responsible for any rent that person refuses to pay, or any damage so there is no reason you can't sign a lease for a place of your own. Marcy
Finding a good tennet depends on the rental market. You do understand that even if you can sub lease (generally not allowed in most leases), your still responsible for the rent on your lease...your just now a landlord and have to collect what your due from YOUR tennent?
Yes. anytime you co-sign a lease you are 100% responsible not only for the money of rent but 100% of all other terms. Such as damage, late fees, early termination fees, court costs, etc. for the full duration of the family members tenant status. In a lease or month-to-month the co-signer remains responsible until the tenant is no longer on property. If the co-signer wants to be relieved of future liability, then the co-signer should send a written notice to the landlord, before the lease renews or goes month-to-month, requesting he/she to be removed from the agreement as a co-signer. I would imagine the terms and rules would still apply, even though the lease expired and is now month-to-month. So write a letter and give notice that you are ending your arrangement.
The natural demise of the lease is grounds for eviction. The process varies by state.
My roommate and I were looking for an out on our lease, and had a similar question. We were able to get a great deal of information at www.apartmentleasebreakers.com. Check it out.
No. You are still under a contractual agreement to fulfill the terms of your lease, no matter who the manager may be. The lease is usually an agreement contract between yourself and the management company who owns the apartment complex, not between yourself and the individual manager.
No. But, you will still be responsible for your share of the previous lease unless the landlord/rental agency (not the the other leasees) agree to release you from your obligation.
The rental company will require you and the person who is paying your rent to sign the lease. You both will be responsible for the apartment for the duration of the lease.
The best option is to talk to the Apartment Management and try to keep penalties at a minimum. Another good option is to Sublease the apartment to another party, but you still may have to pay a small portion of the rent.
You can get out of a lease but there is always a penalty. Usually you have to pay aat least a months rent plus an additional charge. Some properties can charge you for the rest of the lease. That means if you have six months left on your lease then you owe six months rent!
Yes.
If the unit is rented immediately the landlord cannot charge you the rent for the rest of the terms on the lease, but may keep your deposit.
Depends on the lease usually the answer is no, both parties are still legally obligated to the terms of the lease, so do not let your partner take their name off of the lease.AnswerContact your apartment management and see what terms they have available for you. The first answer may be that you cannot do this without paying out the remainder of the lease, but persist in taking this up to the owner, particularly if you cannot afford this on one income.
In most states you would still have to go thru eviction proceedures if the tenent has a lease.
All cosigning means is you are responsible for any rent that person refuses to pay, or any damage so there is no reason you can't sign a lease for a place of your own. Marcy