Your rent, whether for a mobile home lot or anything else, is not a debt, but rather an ongoing monthly fee for your right to occupy that dwelling or structure. As such, it cannot be admitted to bankruptcy. If you can't pay the rent, then you can't stay!
Lot rent maeans you are renting a vacant peice of land, which may or may not have improvements, like water, sewer lines , or electricity.
You rent a floor sander from somewhere like Home Depot. They sell different sanding pads to go with them. Get goggles and mask too, this makes a LOT of dust.
The owner can begin eviction actions against you.
From my experience, electric paint guns such as the Wagner Power Sprayer perform poorly. In a word, they suck. I've found that if you add a little paint thinner to your paint they tend to work a lot better. If you want a nice job, try to rent a commercial grade airless paint sprayer. It does a lot better job and wastes a lot less paint. Reserve the unit and make sure all your prep is done. The units frequently rent by the hour. Bring it home, blow on your coating, and take it back.
The normal monthly rental amount, minus trash, sewer and water.
If you have co-signed as a tenant on the lot then yes you are.
Your rent, whether for a mobile home lot or anything else, is not a debt, but rather an ongoing monthly fee for your right to occupy that dwelling or structure. As such, it cannot be admitted to bankruptcy. If you can't pay the rent, then you can't stay!
The bank or current lien holder will take possession of the mobile home after the required steps of repossession takes place. The bank or current lien holder of the mobile home is responsible for paying the lot rent unless the mobile home is sold to a secondary party such as an investor. At this point, the lot rent follows the ownership of the mobile home. In most cases, the larger banks who specialize in mobile home financing will pay atleast a portion of the lot rent. It is very important to contact the park owner to verify the amount of park rent that is due. This is very negotiable especially if the new owner of the mobile home plans on leaving the mobile home in the park. Note: The park owner is a great prospect to sell this mobile home to.
They vary, It depends on the contract you sign with the park.
Impossible to say . -In my area of British Columbia lot rent varies from 300 to over 700 for little apparent difference in lot or park. I've heard it's the same everywhere.
One of the things one can sell to rent back is one's home. There are schemes which enable one to sell one's home but continue to live in it (rent it back). These schemes should not be entered into without a lot of thought and research.
Whether it is better to buy or rent a vacation home depends on how much money one has. It is generally much more expensive to own a vacation home and it should only be for people with a lot of money.
That is a decent amount of memory for a home computer.
Usually on a particular date of each month, in my park, the first of each month.
If it's on your own lot, you are very fortunate. Most mobiles are in parks where the mobile owner pays rent.
After the issuance of a writ of possession, which is not the same as an eviction, you have 30 days if lot rent is paid, 5 days if it is not.