“Dirt” is never considered to be “normal wear and tear”. The unit should be returned clean or be charged to clean or cover up yur dirt no matter where it is in the unit. Just make sure you have good move out guidelines that are signed at move in
5 years 10 months ago#25808by Brenda Summers Davis
Courtney Bruner we charge for those things if the vendor charges us. Vendor only charges us if the holes are larger than a pencil eraser, or if they are excessive.
Courtney Bruner we have to prime and paint any units that were smoked in. Vendor charges us extra, and we pass on the charge to the resident (less the charge we would have paid for a normal paint, because we would have paid that anyway)
We lost both times. You cannot charge for normal maint costs including paint. Now if they had painted it and we had to paint back thats diff. He was charging people for regular paints.
I have on rare occasions, if they have lived there less than a year and there are holes, nicotine, crayon, sharpie, etc. Document with pictures. Otherwise we don't.
We painted after every move out- would charge the difference from a usual paint and whatever the painters charged for “extras”. (Patching, extra coats, etc).
If the vendor charges me (i.e. tenant painted a unit and didn’t prime it/return it to original color, holes in the wall, removing decorations/stickers from wall), then, yes, I will pass along those extra charges to the tenant. But just for a normal turn paint, no, I wouldn’t charge.
We would charge for- Excessive mounting holes (their wall was covered in picture hangers), holes larger that a quarter, different color, pet damage, smoke damage, anything that takes more than 1 coat of paint to cover.
Dirty walls or scuff marks is normal wear and tear to us...we are painting the apartment anyways. To us, if you nickle and dime move-out charges it reduces the chance the former resident and their 20+ close friends, 200+ social media friends will rent from you in the future. No sense in loosing future leases for a scuff mark.