| MAY
2005 :: CONSUMER ED
Safe
at Home
Moving
Out? Here's How to Make Apartment Life Livable.
By
Karen Blumenthal
Staff
Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
After
enduring all the rules of living at home and then suffering through
a few years of crowded college dorms, your first apartment can seem
like heaven on Earth. But even when you have your own place, you
aren't home free, so to speak.
Housing in all
its forms is often the biggest financial responsibility you will
have at any one time. And in addition to paying your rent and utility
bills on time, you'll have to take decent care of the place and
be a good neighbor, or face penalties later.
"A lot
of first time renters are very naïve about the impact that
first rental is going to have on their future," says Marc Banner,
a longtime property manager in Boise, Idaho, and president of the
National Association of Residential Property Managers. The kind
of reference your first landlord gives to your second and third
landlords could affect what kind of place you can rent in the future-and
even whether you can buy a house, he says.
At the same
time, you'll want a place where you feel safe, where the landlord
promptly makes repairs and where the cost doesn't chew up most of
your budget. Here are some factors to consider when renting your
first apartment:
Shop
around--and visit more than once. Rents can vary dramatically
by neighborhood. In New York's Manhattan borough, you might pay
$1,500 or $1,600 a month for a small room and a bathroom in popular
neighborhood, and half that for a one-bedroom apartment across the
river in Brooklyn, says Michael Burtei, a graduate assistant in
the off-campus housing office at New York University.
Once you have
your eye on a place, you should inspect the actual apartment and
not just a model, which may be quite different. And ask questions:
Are appliances included? Does the fitness room have equipment from
this century? Where will you park-and where will your guests park?
Visit the complex or building at different times of day, like 6
p.m. on Saturday, or hang around the mailboxes to see what it's
like.
While you're
there, ask people who live there if there are problems. "Everybody
who rents there will have an opinion," says Mark Kreditor,
owner of Get There First Realty in Dallas, which leases homes and
condos.
Do
the numbers. Your landlord will want you to have income
that is at least three or four times your monthly rent, or at least
$2,100 to $2,800 a month for a $700-a-month apartment. But that
calculation may be too cozy for your budget if you also have student
loans, a car payment and desire to go out occasionally. If paying
the rent is a strain, you should consider a cheaper place or look
for a roommate.
If you don't
have income or a credit record, your parents will probably have
to guarantee that they will pay if you don't.
Add
in the other costs. When you decide to rent, you'll have
to put down a deposit, ranging from $100 or a half month's rent
in the Sunbelt, to a full month of rent or more in high-demand cities.
In New York, that money may become your last month's rent; in the
South, it may be refunded if you leave the apartment in good condition.
In popular,
high-cost areas like Manhattan, Boston and San Francisco, you may
have to pay a broker to help you find a place, a cost that can range
from a month's rent to 17% of your annual rent.
In many places,
water, sewer services and sometimes heat are included in the rent-but
not always. You'll probably pay the electricity and gas bills. In
newer apartments, cable TV and wireless Internet services may be
a free perk.
Signing
on the dotted line. When you've made up your mind, you'll
fill out an application allowing your credit, employment and criminal
records to be checked. If you're approved, you'll sign a lease,
or contract, that will commit you for six months to a year, depending
on your region. The sentences may be written by lawyers, but read
the lease anyway. What will it cost you to break the lease? Who
pays for pest control? And what are your rights if the landlord
doesn't fix a problem promptly?
Roommate
considerations. Renting with one or more friends may
allow you to get far more space at a lower cost per person. But
before you move in, work out some basics. Whose names will go on
the lease? Who is responsible for the rent if one person moves out?
Kendall Laughlin,
who runs Apartment Selector offices in Atlanta and Dallas, and has
two college-age sons, says it also helps if roommates work out even
the personal details ahead of time. How will food be divided? Who
will do what chores? And how can you get out if the arrangement
isn't working? "People who have roommates need an exit strategy,"
he says.
After
the deal. Before you move in, take pictures of the property
with a camera with a time stamp. If there's a dispute with the landlord
later over some kind of damage, you'll have proof of the apartment's
condition when you arrived.
You might also
consider renters insurance, which costs about $10 to $15 a month.
The landlord's insurance covers only the building. Renter's insurance
will cover your stuff and protect you if someone lets the water
overflow in the bathtub upstairs.
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