For arguments sake, these rooms are potentially being sublet at the old rate. When they come up for renewal, the rate may jump to the new price (which the OP has said that any of the full apartments up for renewal are going at) of €800p/m.The OP just said that there are rooms available in the same block for EUR 650 p/m. The owners are trying to charge EUR 800.
The market rate for rent is defined as the price that new tenants can obtain a similarily specced property in the same area. If a new tenant is able to rent one today for EUR 650, by definition those paying EUR 800 are paying above market rate.For arguments sake, these rooms are potentially being sublet at the old rate. When they come up for renewal, the rate may jump to the new price (which the OP has said that any of the full apartments up for renewal are going at) of €800p/m.
And one room at a lower price does not prove that all other prices are above the market rate.The market rate and the rate that the owners pick off the top of their head are not one and the same.
If there are cheaper rooms out there it proves that a landlord is willing to accept that price, and if taken up by a tenant proves that there are willing tenants at that price. This is the open market rate.And one room at a lower price does not prove that all other prices are above the market rate.
Fair enough, the OP should do their homework to try and work out what the market rate is and see if they are being wronged. Ultimately though it is the PRTBs job to determine the open market rate and take action against the landlord if they are exceeding it.I'm suggesting they provide the information to prove it.
It only costs EUR 25 to place the complaint with the PRTB, and has the added bonus of preventing the rent being increased until the dispute is resolved.
If what the OP says is true the owner is using his position (sole LL) to extract monopoly rents.
Again, your best bet is to walk. The rental market is swimming with stock at present.
Everybody seems to think the PRTB will be able to solve this. Is it actually the case that the PRTB have the power to stop the landlord increasing the rent by as much as he wants?
Anyone know how they decide what is the market rent. Do they use a one mile radius, post code, distance from city centre?
The Op has not mentioned the location of the apartments. It may be in the centre of Dublin or a high value area. As the owners own the entire block, they can let them at whatever price they wish. It's called Supply and Demand, regardless of what the wretched PRTB say.
Ok the PRTB have the power. Different question, has anyone an example of where the PRTB was able to keep the rent down?
Bankrupt are you saying that 'open market rates' is waffle. A figure that is impossible to quantify? If that's the case they may have the 'power' but it isn't up to much and would be of no help to the OP.
Also conversely do the PRTB have to power to reduce rents if the market for rents is decreasing?
That is an interesting link.There's a good discussion of rent reviews in this document from page 69 on.
Rents may be reviewed upwards or downwards. An
example serves to illustrate the significance of this point. Assume
that the parties agree the rent for a particular dwelling. The tenant
proceeds to sign a tenancy agreement, takes up possession and
then (almost immediately) refers a dispute to the PRTB
concerning the rent reserved (i.e., the tenant argues that the rent
reserved under the tenancy agreement is “greater than the amount
of the market rent for that tenancy”). The result is that a rent
freely negotiated and agreed between the landlord and the tenant
may subsequently be disturbed by referral of a dispute about the
rent to the PRTB (depending on the Board’s view of the
prevailing market rent)
Am I reading this correctly, that landlords do not even have to right to try and charge exhorborant rents to new tenants either? Even if the tenant previously agrees to pay that price?
What is to stop all tenants from putting in a dispute with the PRTB immediately after they start renting a place, and effectively stop the market price from ever being increased?
If I am reading it correctly that paragraph would also seem to suggest that even the tenants in the OPs block that agreed to the new rent could put in a dispute with the PRTB stating that it is not at the market rate.
Bankrupt, the first case you put in isn't clear and the second one while it holds the rent for that particular tenant, it seems the tenant was evicted anyway so the landlord can get a new tenant at whatever rent the market will take it.
In relation to rent decreases, if after a year the landlord comes to a rent review can he be forced to reduce the rent if the market has decreased. But it seems now you can get a tenant in and immediately the tenant can complain to the PRTB that the rent is too high.
I don't see how the PRTB can use their database to decide on what rents should be. You have to make allowance for quality & size of the property also. A graded structure like you have for hotels perhaps.
The only thing the PRTB can judge one property versus another is street and size. They cannot tell the quality of the property so it would be impossible to compare like with like.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?