Random question, say I'm unemployed and would like to get an apartment. Would most places turn me down? If I was able to pay for the entire lease up front, would it make a difference? Would it potentially lower the monthly rent if I paid in a lump sum.Thanks
9/7/2010 11:07:46 AM
most apartment complexes ostensibly require a monthly income of X times the rent. not all complexes verify though, and i'm not sure how they'd handle paying everything up front
9/7/2010 11:47:11 AM
My buddy got his apartment simply by showing his bank account. He currently did not have a source of income (other than poker) and they let him sign a lease. I would think that they could not care less what your status is if you paid in full and it would definitely give you leverage in negotiating.
9/7/2010 11:50:38 AM
Mine requires 3x the rent in income or proof 6 months' worth of rent in savings, I believe.
9/7/2010 11:55:10 AM
9/7/2010 2:35:21 PM
The income part or the savings part? I don't see a problem with either of those. I wouldn't really want to rent to someone who didn't have a job or money in savings either. And obviously they would let a parent co-sign if you are a student or something. It's when you don't want/have a co-signer that applies.
9/7/2010 2:42:57 PM
9/7/2010 3:02:30 PM
^^ sorry, I misread that as BOTH x income and x savings. it's not so bad now!
9/7/2010 7:23:14 PM
Depends on the place. One I looked at I said I'd pay for 6 months upfront if and they still wanted a cosigner. This was Sumter square, so don't waste your time looking at them.
9/7/2010 8:00:41 PM
Complexes outside of the typical college area don't usually allow for co-signers, unless you can find a unit not owned by a company. I've had trouble with that since I am a student living in North Raleigh. I had to have a parent actually sign the lease as a roommate. It hasn't been a problem so far but it's a pain in the ass when any paperwork needs to be signed.
9/7/2010 10:39:45 PM
As others have said, it depends on the place. The couple of apartments I have lived in, would not take more than 2 months of rent in advance. So when I came into some money a few years back, and they wouldn't take more than 2 months worth, I was forced to blow the rest I've also never had an apartment complex confirm my job status/income situation either, so you could just lie and say you work for X company making at least 3x rent/month and see what happens
9/7/2010 11:38:36 PM
Yeah but that would be immediate grounds for eviction if they ever needed a reason in the future. Same for lying about anything else on the application that is typically not checked after collecting the fee.
9/8/2010 1:53:07 AM
9/8/2010 6:29:06 AM
I live in an apartment off of Avent Ferry and they never needed to see a paystub or asked about my income level or anything.
9/8/2010 8:57:35 PM
Place I live I doubt they actually did any sort of check considering for all intents and purposes I'm unemployed right now.
9/9/2010 10:59:17 AM
9/9/2010 1:55:51 PM
^
9/9/2010 2:13:06 PM
9/10/2010 7:02:15 AM
Everywhere that i went that wanted 3-4x the monthly income would take 3-6 months of rent and completely waive the income requirement.
9/11/2010 6:40:42 AM
I had to show proof of income for my apartment, but my offer letter sufficed for that. The requirement was 3x rent (personally, I'd require 4x at the least)
9/11/2010 1:57:08 PM
^^^I like it a lot! It's in between my friends and my work, and I get a lot more school work done than I would if I still lived over near NCSU.
9/12/2010 7:24:07 PM