I'm not sure exactly what you mean...if it is the cost of getting rid of a tennent an expense to the "rental" business and also for tax, yes. Just like most any expense needed to run the biz.
The current checks made for a sitting tenant depends on the agreement between the landlord and tenant. To know what yours is you would have to check the lease.
A landlord can typically disclose information about a tenant's rental history, payment behavior, and any damages caused to the property to a third party. However, disclosing personal information such as credit history or medical records is usually not allowed without the tenant's consent.
No, a landlord cannot change the payment method for rent without providing prior notice to the tenant.
youy cant evict them until they die look up news a landlord recently killed a siting tenant
Yes, a landlord can provide a negative reference for a tenant based on their experience with the tenant's behavior, payment history, or other relevant factors.
Yes.
Save the money in an escrow account and let the landlord take the tenant to court. This can be explained to the Judge
Sharecropping was a system where landowners allowed tenants to use their land in exchange for a share of the crops produced. The tenant would receive a portion of the harvested crop and the landowner would take the rest as payment for rent. This system often led to cycles of debt and poverty for the tenant farmers.
Absent an agreement between the now-deceased person & the heirs, typically not.
Anytime after a tenant has missed their rent payment, is a good time to send a letter for rent payment. It is all up to the landlord as to when a good time is. Personally, I would suggest waiting two weeks time to give the tenant enough time to gather the money if they have it to give to you late, and if not within those first two weeks, then send them a late payment letter.
That's up to the new tenant. You should have an agreement in writing so the landlord will not be able to charge you for the removal of the property if your deal with the new tenant falls through.
If the person has the legal right to live there on a month-to-month basis, he is a tenant. But we are presuming that you, the landlord, didn't rent the unit out to this person: perhaps your tenant did, known as subleasing. If you, the landlord, allowed this, then you have to have your tenant evict the sub-tenant. If you didn't allow this, then you have to enforce the terms of the lease, and make your tenant correct this problem immediately or you can evict him, which automatically forces the sub-tenant out.