Going periodic and payment of Council Tax
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Originally posted by westminster View PostYou could, however, serve notice to increase the rent. See http://www.landlordzone.co.uk/forums...earchid=333041
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No, you can't change the terms of the contract without the T's agreement. You could, however, serve notice to increase the rent. See http://www.landlordzone.co.uk/forums...earchid=333041
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Going periodic and payment of Council Tax
My original fixed term contract states that I, the landlord, will pay the council tax. It is expiring and I wish to renew the tenancy (no rental increase) but change the responsability of paying the council tax to the tenant in the contract. If the tenant refuses to sign and allows the tenancy to go periodic can I still demand the tenant pay the council tax or not? Cheers.
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by boletusWhen the account is closed, any credit is returned to the customer. (Just been dealing with the account of an ex tenant who had been over paying estimated bills.)...
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 10:19 AM -
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by AndrewDodHere is another bit of pending legislation/government spittle that has been ill thought through.
My kid has a tenancy which includes Council Tax and Energy as part of the rent. Her rent has gone up a lot as a result of increased cost of these inclusions.
Now after the fact...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
26-05-2022, 21:42 PM -
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Thanks. But who would I sell to? I am unable to benefit from keeping the property any prospective buyer would have the same thoughts.
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 10:04 AM -
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Is there any information you can point me to that deals with this topic? It is unlikely that I will be able to get my properties up to a Band C in time for 2028 and I have sitting tenants who are, by law, entitled to stay put in their properties and can't just be evicted because they have a right to...
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
27-05-2022, 22:11 PM -
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by Tony-EdwardsI believe that under a shared-facility HMO situation, Council Tax is levied on the whole property.
I'm thinking of buying a Section 257 HMO (a building converted to 4 self-contained studios that doesn't meet the relevant building standards).
I'm being told it is paying 1 council...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 09:28 AM -
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Reply to Access to neighbouring property act.by jpkeatesMy guess is that the issue is a) removing the dead ivy and b) fixing the damaged brickwork.
Ivy is relatively easy to kill, but it usually stays in place when it's dead.
It usually turns brown, which isn't that unattractive (to me), but it doesn't move.
And if the reason...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 09:16 AM -
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by PlumbobHas anyone successfully used the act for the purpose it is designed for please? Did the court action take forever to obtain the judgement? I'm about to get notified by my solicitor that we need to go to court to be able to cut the huge ivy growth on the flank wall growing up over the roof now. T I ...
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
26-05-2022, 12:50 PM -
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by HooperAdded as a credit. I wonder whether you will be allowed to withdraw any balance - should you be lucky enough to be in credit?...
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 09:08 AM -
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Reply to Access to neighbouring property act.I don’t understand why this is even an issue, let alone spending costs on solicitor fee’s and contemplating courts orders.
As I understand it the OP owns the ivy and he owns the wall it is growing up. The OP has a 500 mm pathway to gain access to the ivy and also has access to his...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 09:02 AM -
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Reply to Access to neighbouring property act.by JK0Yeah, that's what I was thinking. She'll be begging o/p to come over & remove it then.
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
28-05-2022, 08:34 AM -
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