Yes, unless the landlord breached the lease in some significant way.
If you break the lease, your landlord can charge you the amount of rent for the apartment or unit during the time it is left unoccupied up until the dwelling has been rented out or until your lease expires, whichever comes first.
Check your local tenant/landlord laws. Generally, they can charge what they want--it is a matter of what the market will bear. They own the property and it is their choice, with some guidelines about exclusions, as to who they will rent to and what the terms of the lease are.
I am not sure if the rule varies by state but the landlord can't charge any fees other than state regulated late fees and court cost if evicted, unless it's stated in your lease. You would have to be informed of any changes at least 30 days prior to the charge being assessed.
Yes, the landlord can charge a prorated rent until you, your belongings, and cleaning supplies are physically out of the apartment and you've returned the key.
Depending on the pass-through sections of your lease, the landlord may be able to charge you a management fee. Each lease is individual. If you'd like more information about your specific case, drop a direct message with your contact information on twitter @nnnleaseaudit or nnnleaseaudit.blogspot.
If you break the lease, your landlord can charge you the amount of rent for the apartment or unit during the time it is left unoccupied up until the dwelling has been rented out or until your lease expires, whichever comes first.
what can a landlord charge to move in a California house rental?
If a cat damages a rental property, the landlord can charge you for it. They will usually take it out of the security deposit.
Yes, a landlord in Connecticut can charge first, last, and a security deposit to renter.
It is unseemly that a landlord can charge a tenant for other than the items listed in the lease. You can pay them and take your landlord to landlord-tenant court for reimbursement, or you can approach a landlord-tenant advocacy to find the answer that you want.
As much as they want. It all depends on the location, prices of comparable accommodations, and what the landlord feels they can charge.
I'm no lawyer but... If a landlord may charge a pet deposit at all, then surely they can change it for an animal in a tank.
Yes
Yes
landlord, home owner, or privious owner
I do not understand the question. What do you mean by "on breaks"?
yes