That was eminently possible decades ago. Now much less so.Literally no idea how I've managed to ever become a landlord, hold down a job, live in a different city in my twenties and end up in later life managing property from abroad in two different cities without ever having an agent.
He is in college and would love to rent it, as he is in college in another city and needs to pay for his accommodation.
Thk u, but he needs some legal basis to rent? Access utilities etc etc?He just rents it out himself and tells Granny he is taking care of everything. As long as she is happy with this of course.
No bother, thks for ideas anyway......, he is a mature student 24 and studying in Cork and the property is in Dublin.My mistake, sorry - I thought Grandson wanted to move into property. Hence caretaker suggestion.
I wouldn't do a caretaker agreement outside that.
Can you clarify what exactly you mean.
1) He moves into the house now and rents it from his Granny (which is what some people are answering)
or
2) He stays where he is but lets the house to a tenant and collects rent from the tenant. (Which is what others are answering)
Brendan
Just to clarify........see above for the original post.....Hi, my son has just been told he is being left a house in a will by his granny, who is now in a nursing home. She is giving him the keys and says he can have the house now as she will no longer be living in it. He is in college and would love to rent it, as he is in college in another city and needs to pay for his accommodation.
any tips/advice please
Thks for advice, what legal doc would be best for him to do this, lease? Mangement contracts?Don't see anything stopping him renting it out. This is what needs to be considered:
- the rent would surely belong to granny
- income tax would have to be paid by her
- he could rent it out and pay house insurance and repairs out of it
- the income from rent is -happily- no longer assessed for Fair Deal.
The Good News:
- Granny can gift her grandson 3K annually without any tax implications for either party.
The reason the Fair Deal was changed was to encourage houses left vacant while people spent years in nursing homes. This case is perfect for that. And your son will learn to manage property.
In addition, Granny ought to pay him for managing the property. It is an actual task. So I would suggest 10% of rent. He'll have to declare that as income, but presumably he'll be earning little to no other money and so no issues on that score either.
Be careful about pre letting expenses. Come back to us on that if you decide on this route.
The benefits
- property is minded
- income received
- grandson learns how to manage as a landlord
- he gets paid for so doing
- house insurance is paid out of rental income
- house is maintained to a good standard out of rent
- somebody gets housed
- he should also complete the income tax returns for granny.
I've never used a lease. Because all the rules that landlords have to abide by already exist. Clean the house, put an ad in, get deposit and one month upfront, agree on what the tenant will pay (cut grass, esb, gas, bins). Take meter readings. Register with RTB. Annually. Inform the house insurance people the house is rented. Collect rent. Inspect property regularly. Organise repairs as necessary. Do the tax returns.Thks for advice, what legal doc would be best for him to do this, lease? Mangement contracts?
LOL. Like put out the bins, cut the grass, keep the place clean, don't destroy the top of the cooker, don't put a hot iron down on the mdf kitchen worksurface, don't let food rot in the fridge, open the bathroom windows after a shower, don't take the batteries out of the smoke alarm, air the house regularly, don't wait 3 weeks to report a leak, clean the dryer lint, don't put runners in the washing machine, clean out the dishwasher exit section, don't keep a puppy, don't accumulate household waste in the shed for weeks, keep the communal areas clean, wash windows regularly (annually will do), don't get locked out at midnight of a Friday night coz you can't see the keyhole ............ . Them kind of rules. I've a new one today. Don't forget to open bedroom windows regularly or damp will build up and the windows will rust shut.I would do a lease as the tenants might not know the rules they have to abide by.
If they don't know the basics - pay rent on time & in full, keep property clean, report any issues promptly - no amount of paperwork will make a whit of difference.tenants might not know the rules they have to abide by
Thks for advice again, yeah the house is grand nothin fancy but clean etc. Does my son not need some legal formality signed by his granny in order for him to do this (rent). Ps he will prob use an agency as he is studying in Cork and house is in DublinI've never used a lease. Because all the rules that landlords have to abide by already exist. Clean the house, put an ad in, get deposit and one month upfront, agree on what the tenant will pay (cut grass, esb, gas, bins). Take meter readings. Register with RTB. Annually. Inform the house insurance people the house is rented. Collect rent. Inspect property regularly. Organise repairs as necessary. Do the tax returns.
Is the property in good condition.
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