Yes, you can be a guarantor for someone's rent, which means you agree to pay the rent if the tenant is unable to do so.
No, you can not stop being a guarantor to an agreement while the terms of that agreement are in force. Thus if you are a guarantor for rent and the person your are guaranteeing fails to pay the rent - YOU must pay the rent.If you a guarantor to a loan and the person with the loan defaults, YOU must pay off the loan.This is what it means to be a guarantor - you can not get out of the agreement when things begin to go wrong.Think VERY carefully before being a guarantor to ANYTHING.
A tenant is the person who rents and lives in a property, while a guarantor is someone who agrees to pay the rent or cover any damages if the tenant is unable to do so.
In most cases, a guarantor cannot break a lease agreement on behalf of the tenant. The guarantor's responsibility is to ensure that the tenant fulfills their obligations under the lease, such as paying rent. If the tenant wants to break the lease, they typically need to do so themselves according to the terms of the lease agreement.
In most cases, a guarantor cannot terminate a lease agreement on behalf of the tenant. The guarantor's responsibility is to ensure that the tenant fulfills their obligations under the lease, such as paying rent. If the tenant wants to terminate the lease, they typically need to follow the terms outlined in the lease agreement, such as giving proper notice to the landlord.
When a person does not have good enough credit to secure a loan or financing on their own, they need a guarantor. A guarantor is a co-signer, and that means if the person taking out the loan does not make the payments, then the guarantor has to make the payments.
No, you can not stop being a guarantor to an agreement while the terms of that agreement are in force. Thus if you are a guarantor for rent and the person your are guaranteeing fails to pay the rent - YOU must pay the rent.If you a guarantor to a loan and the person with the loan defaults, YOU must pay off the loan.This is what it means to be a guarantor - you can not get out of the agreement when things begin to go wrong.Think VERY carefully before being a guarantor to ANYTHING.
A tenant is the person who rents and lives in a property, while a guarantor is someone who agrees to pay the rent or cover any damages if the tenant is unable to do so.
In most cases, a guarantor cannot break a lease agreement on behalf of the tenant. The guarantor's responsibility is to ensure that the tenant fulfills their obligations under the lease, such as paying rent. If the tenant wants to break the lease, they typically need to do so themselves according to the terms of the lease agreement.
A guarantor is someone who has agreed to be legally bound to pay certain debts of another person if that other person does not, for any reason, pay his or her own debts. A guarantor of an apartment lease will be liable for the rent not paid by the tenant, as well as for any damage done and repairs not made by the tenant. Being a guarantor involves much more than simply being a reference for another person. Being a guarantor could end up costing someone thousands of dollars.
In most cases, a guarantor cannot terminate a lease agreement on behalf of the tenant. The guarantor's responsibility is to ensure that the tenant fulfills their obligations under the lease, such as paying rent. If the tenant wants to terminate the lease, they typically need to follow the terms outlined in the lease agreement, such as giving proper notice to the landlord.
guaranter
Yes
There's no legal reason that one could not do so, but the decision would be totally left to the landlord/property manager.
When a person does not have good enough credit to secure a loan or financing on their own, they need a guarantor. A guarantor is a co-signer, and that means if the person taking out the loan does not make the payments, then the guarantor has to make the payments.
No, trustee is different from a guarantor.
His father acted as guarantor when he got the loan from the bank to buy the house.
if you are emancipated and independent from from your legal guardian who is over the age of 18 otherwise no but you can get it with your parents conditions usually you will need a guarantor under those circumstances.