If you want to move before your lease is up, you have a few options: 1) Subletting your apartment to someone else with your landlord's approval, 2) negotiating an early termination with your landlord, or 3) finding a replacement tenant to take over your lease.
A lease is similar to rent, except it is a contract for a specific length of time. For instance, if you have a one-year lease on an apartment, it means you are agreeing to pay rent each month for a year. If you want to move out before the year is up, you may be required to pay for the rest of the year.
If his name is on the lease AND you are on it you are BOTH responsible for the rent, however, if you sign off on it then it is HIS responsiblity.
This is unique technology upgrade option. Throughout the lease term if you want to move to new equipment we'll pre-pay that old commitment, sell that old equipment for any credit and write a brand new lease on the new equipment.
Most mortgage lenders will offer refinance options for consumers. You first may want to compare rates and options on line before contacting them directly.
There are a few companies out there that will do this for you. Most Lease to Own look for you to have a steady job of about 2 years, and enough salary to cover the payments. Most will call employers and current landlord for refererences. If you want to have a company help you through every step, with many options to help you become successful, check out www.ilease-a-house.com. They have teamed up with a 25 year Lease to Own Professional and offer great value for buyers, sellers, and investors.
They may if they have the space, but they have the right to hold you to the lease that you signed.
You know what you want to do. You can review your lease carefully to see if there is a clear answer to what you want to do. For example, if you want to move before the lease is terminated look for the language that addresses that question. It may come under the heading, "Early Termination". If you don't understand your rights after reviewing the lease, you can have the lease reviewed by an attorney, or landlord-tenant agency in your city if there is one, to determine what your rights are under the lease. Not all leases are well drafted. It may be worth it for you to have it reviewed by a professional.
A lease is similar to rent, except it is a contract for a specific length of time. For instance, if you have a one-year lease on an apartment, it means you are agreeing to pay rent each month for a year. If you want to move out before the year is up, you may be required to pay for the rest of the year.
i would fine a way to see if he is braking the lease in any way and than take that to a judge and have him sign you out of your lease but you have to have proof the your landlord is braking hin lease with you
You would want to do a month to month lease agreement when you aren't sure whether you want to live in a place or not or when you are waiting to move into a house that you're building.
As soon as a lease is signed - whether or not money has exchanged hands - a legal obligation has been formed. If the landlord decides that he or she does not want you to move in, they may break the lease, but they will open themselves up to a lawsuit.
The foreclosure sale will function to terminate the lease. However, until the foreclosure sale takes place, the owner is still the owner, and the lease remains in effect.
Definitely check on the lease time; you don't want to make the lease time too long (or infinite) because that will waste IP addresses.
If you give the car back to the car dealership before your lease has expired, then the lease is over. You stop paying the monthly payments. This is very common in people who want a low monthly payment, thus they get a long car lease and then end up trading back in the car for a new car before the lease has expired.
You can sign a lease before someone else is expired but the lease will have to specify that the start of the renting period is after the other persons lease expired. So if the prior lease says it ends the 1st then the new lease must be dated to start after that. This is not that unusual. Most landlords want to fill the unit as quickly as possible and it can take sometime to go through the process so the will often started as soon as they can. I've done this before. Generally speaking once I get my tenant screening results back, I want to get them locked in as soon as possible.
I own a house that is leased until 1/31/10 and I want to move into it. Can I give the tenant a 60 day notice to move?
You should be able to just move out. But check with your land lord for the proper procedure. Good luck at moving, I know that it is stressful.