In most cases, the renter of the lease purchase house is required to do the repairs. The renter should do a full house inspection before signing their contract.
Commonly, tenants will be responsible for the operation and repairs associated with the appliances used during the lease period.
A Bond lease is when the tenant is fully responsible for operating expenses, maintenance, repairs, and replacements for entire building and site, without limitations.
When you take out a mortgage, you are purchasing the house right then and there. A lease purchase is when you begin by renting out the house, but are also given the option to purchase it within a given period of time.
If the repairs needed are essential for living in the house you must give the landlord at least seven days of notice before the rent is due that you will be making the repairs and offsetting the rent. Your landlord could still evict you but if the repairs were essential you will win. If the repairs are non-essential you can choose not to renew the lease. If the essential repairs are expensive you can choose to break the lease and move out, and get your deposit back.
Any damages caused to a building which is under lease and which are directly caused by the tenant are normally deducted from the bond if necessary. Otherwise, the tenant is responsible for paying for the repairs, but it is the landlord/homeowner who must get the repairs done (they then pass the bill on).
i think it is considered abandoned if it is not in your lease it shouldn't be there, therefore you are not responsible.
Read your lease.
Not unless they are responsible for the lease and/or lease payment. They may be required to be listed as an occupant to comply with occupancy rules for the house. If they are expected to pay part of the lease, someone needs to have it in writing in order to enforce the agreement, otherwise it is at their risk.
You are.
if you make your property a section 8 property who is responsible for problems that occur on the house
Anyone on the lease or that signed the lease is legally responsible for the rent, unless otherwise noted in the lease.
Depends on your lease agreement. Usually the landlord is responsible for most repairs but in some instances of insect infestation it will depend on the type of pest and the cause of infestation. Like with some municipalities they state that the tenant could be at fault for the costs. Try asking your landlord if they will cover the cost or even split the cost.