In most states YES, but in some states NO. Check with your state.
There is no obligation for a landlord to take Section 8.
Section 8 usually does not allow renting out of rooms within the same house.
The overcharge is fraud, and a federal crime. You should notify the housing authority that issued the voucher, and sue the landlord for the overpayment, or just refuse to pay rent until you are square.
It might be best to ask the Housing Authority that issued the voucher. Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. As far as the foreclosure, it depends on what stage the foreclosure is in. Until the foreclosure sale happens, the tenant owes the rent to the landlord.
if you make your property a section 8 property who is responsible for problems that occur on the house
There is no obligation for a landlord to take Section 8.
Section 8 usually does not allow renting out of rooms within the same house.
This is rather touchy, because a landlord cannot be a relative of the tenant except under certain circumstances where the tenant is disabled
NO, except under specific circumstances under which the tenant is disabled.
Section 8 is a federal program, and the answer, except under specific circumstances where the tenant is disabled and the relative is a caregiver, is no.
The overcharge is fraud, and a federal crime. You should notify the housing authority that issued the voucher, and sue the landlord for the overpayment, or just refuse to pay rent until you are square.
No.
If a Section 8 tenant steals property from the rental unit, the landlord can pursue legal action for theft and potentially seek damages in small claims court. Additionally, the tenant may face eviction proceedings for violating the lease agreement. The landlord should document the incident and report it to local law enforcement. It’s also advisable to inform the local housing authority, as this behavior could impact the tenant's Section 8 eligibility.
Basically, a section 8 contract is an agreement among the Housing Authority that is administering the section 8 program, the landlord, and the tenant. They usually consist of agreements by which the Housing Authority will, on behalf of the federal government - HUD, to be exact, to the landlord its portion of the rent, to ensure that the tenant's portion is proportionate to his income. There are federal regulations for this program under which all three parties must abide.
It might be best to ask the Housing Authority that issued the voucher. Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. As far as the foreclosure, it depends on what stage the foreclosure is in. Until the foreclosure sale happens, the tenant owes the rent to the landlord.
It may be that the Housing Autority cancelled the Section 8 contract because of the tenant's breach. In that case, yes, the tenant is simply responsible for all of the rent, and if the tenant does not pay, the landlord should move forward with eviction. But, there is federal regulation saying that the tenant cannot be evicted if the Housing Authority simply stopped paying for some reason that has nothing to do with the tenant, like the housing authoriy's error, or budget problems.
Every landlord is required to have insurance, but now the question is what type of insurance. Property insurance is likely the type of insurance that the landlord is carrying. This does not cover anything inside the property that belongs to the tenant. For this, the tenant needs to purchase separate insurance called renters insurance.