This came to mind thanks to a thread on the main site, and I just have to vent.
I absolutely cannot stand the practice of apartment complexes charging pet rent. And I'll tell you why:
They already charge a security deposit: Ok, everyone gets charged this. They hold the amount in a bank account (which, btw, they make interest off of) until you move out, wherein they go and inspect the apartment, deduct (from the original amount) any funds needed to repair/fix up apartment, and then refund the rest to the renter. Or, if the funds don't meet the amount of damage, charge the renter the difference.
They already charge a pet "deposit": Ok, fine. An apartment that has pets in it are more likely to have more wear and tear, things like urine stains from accidents, scratched up doors, etc. And they have to flea-bomb before they let another tenant move in. Ok, great. I understand that. Btw, deposit is put in " " because usually, most if not ALL of this amount is actually NON-refundable regardless if the apartment is damaged or not...making it a fee no matter how much they refer to it as a deposit.
But then they ALSO turn around and charge you anywhere from $20 to $50 dollars OR MORE PER qualifying pet PER MONTH that you're a tenant. So say you have a two year lease with two dogs. At $20 a month for each dog that lease, you'll have paid the complex an extra $960 for that apartment. At $50, you'd be paying an extra $2400!
Keep in mind, you've ALREADY paid a security deposit for damages (that they make and keep interest on). You've ALREADY paid a pet deposit (that they keep most if not all of, whether it's required for damages or not, and...that they make and keep interest on). Now they're tacking on an extra thousand dollars, or two...for what?
It's not applied to damages. Anything the original deposits doesn't cover, they bill you for. So, why??
Yes, some complexes offer 'poop stations' they keep stocked with pick-up bags, but you can't tell me that keeping those maintained justifies the extra charges. I mean, take my last complex. Five hundred units. At least two or three hundred of those people had dogs. Each dog was an extra $20 a month in pet rent. So, 20 x 300 x 12 = $72,000 a YEAR in extra revenue. You cannot tell me that those pick up stations cost that much to stock and maintain in a year. Oh, and that's only if you count each family with a dog as only having ONE dog. I myself had two, and many of the others had two as well.
I absolutely cannot stand the practice of apartment complexes charging pet rent. And I'll tell you why:
They already charge a security deposit: Ok, everyone gets charged this. They hold the amount in a bank account (which, btw, they make interest off of) until you move out, wherein they go and inspect the apartment, deduct (from the original amount) any funds needed to repair/fix up apartment, and then refund the rest to the renter. Or, if the funds don't meet the amount of damage, charge the renter the difference.
They already charge a pet "deposit": Ok, fine. An apartment that has pets in it are more likely to have more wear and tear, things like urine stains from accidents, scratched up doors, etc. And they have to flea-bomb before they let another tenant move in. Ok, great. I understand that. Btw, deposit is put in " " because usually, most if not ALL of this amount is actually NON-refundable regardless if the apartment is damaged or not...making it a fee no matter how much they refer to it as a deposit.
But then they ALSO turn around and charge you anywhere from $20 to $50 dollars OR MORE PER qualifying pet PER MONTH that you're a tenant. So say you have a two year lease with two dogs. At $20 a month for each dog that lease, you'll have paid the complex an extra $960 for that apartment. At $50, you'd be paying an extra $2400!
Keep in mind, you've ALREADY paid a security deposit for damages (that they make and keep interest on). You've ALREADY paid a pet deposit (that they keep most if not all of, whether it's required for damages or not, and...that they make and keep interest on). Now they're tacking on an extra thousand dollars, or two...for what?
It's not applied to damages. Anything the original deposits doesn't cover, they bill you for. So, why??
Yes, some complexes offer 'poop stations' they keep stocked with pick-up bags, but you can't tell me that keeping those maintained justifies the extra charges. I mean, take my last complex. Five hundred units. At least two or three hundred of those people had dogs. Each dog was an extra $20 a month in pet rent. So, 20 x 300 x 12 = $72,000 a YEAR in extra revenue. You cannot tell me that those pick up stations cost that much to stock and maintain in a year. Oh, and that's only if you count each family with a dog as only having ONE dog. I myself had two, and many of the others had two as well.
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