Homes to rent and homes to lease are very similar. Homes to rent you rent them for a week, a month or whatever you agree on withyour landlord. Homes for lease is pretty much the same but some lease to own has an option to buy the place you are renting.
If you're no longer on a lease, the amount of your rent is dependent on what your contract says. Some contracts say that you will continue paying the same rent until you are notified in writing that it will change. It may make sense for you to sign another lease to lock in the amount you pay for another set period of time.
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It depends what kind of lease you have. New York City is an example of a jurisdiction where same-sex marriage is legal. If it is a rent-controlled or rent-stabilized apartment, you are entitled to add your same-sex spouse to any lease renewal and there is no mechanism by which the landlord may object. If you live in public housing (e.g. NYC Housing Authority), a same-sex spouse is treated the same as any other spouse and may be added to the household providing there is no violation of regulations concerning criminal records, substance abuse or citizenship. If you live in any other type of apartment (i.e. "fair market" housing), then the answer is no. Your same-sex spouse certainly has a right to live with you. However, the lease is whatever it is. You cannot force the landlord to add anyone to the lease and if he agrees to alter the lease, it is a new lease and the rent can also be re-negotiated. As with all apartments outside of rent control and public housing regulations, when the lease is over, there is no automatic right to renewal.
Rent bill is for the lease or rent to live in an apartment or house and is paid by the person living there. A property tax bill is for taxes on the property and is paid by the owner.
Most states have the same laws about lease rent, usually that it can not be raised without notice to the renter. Landlords can't kick you out or demand more money, new contracts need to be signed every rental term.
This depends on if your husband is on the original lease. If other bills are in your name than the rent you are responsible for those. If the forner is true you can have your name removed.
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Wisconsin does not have any laws specifying how much notice a landlord must give you in order to raise your rent. Your original lease should specify how much advance notice will be given. On a month to month lease, the landlord is required to give a minimum of 28 days notice, the same as beginning eviction proceedings. If your current lease is still valid, the landlord cannot legally change the rent until the lease ends.
Well, what's a contract versus a lease? A contract may not be a lease. If this is the case then the rent can be increased given proper notice (for example if you pay by the month then your landlord must give you notice of at least 30 days before the next rent is due). If the contract is actually a lease then the landlord normally cannot increase the rent until the lease expires, and must give you proper notice of such increase (at least 30 days before the next rent is due).
Leasing a property is the same as renting. You sign a lease when you rent a property. To find out if you are getting a good price on a property lease you should check around and compare prices for similar properties.
There are many things to be concerned with when renting a house. Two major concerns are 1) the condition of the roof and plumbing, and 2) the the lease agreement states. Pretty much the same things you should be aware of when renting apartments: absentee landlords who don't do maintenace on the property, landlords with poor policies on rent payment, etc. and inflexible leases.
Do you mean moving to another apartment owned by the same landlord? If so, then I suppose that the parties have agreed to leave the terms of the lease the same, and just transfer the lease to a different unit. Nothing wrong with that, but it might be a better idea to sign a new lease.