Thread: Renting Apartments - Long Term Rentals (2 years or more)
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06-30-17 20:22 #31
Posts: 9Looking for Credible Long-Term Rental Property Manager
Fellow AP users and readers... I am looking for a property manager to manage a departamento near to Plaza Italia... The property has rented well for the last two years on Airbnb.. But now the long term market interests me more. Is there an honest property manager in BA...? Lordy... I hope so... Any help is apprecicated.
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03-27-13 14:18 #30
Posts: 28Renting can be a nightmare
I had a 1 year lease on a very nice apt in palermo. After about 9 months the power was cut off. Turns out the landlord had never arranged with edenor to install the meter in the building when it was new. Landlord's agent tells me it is my responsibility to have the new meter installed. WTF! Nice of him to tell me that after the lease is signed and the power gets cut off.
Edenor tells me I need all kinds of documents and an electrician's report, which the landlord only can provide, and he refuses to do so, saying edenor doesn't need all that.
After 2 weeks without power and no way to resolve it I withold my rent, and have regular screaming matches with the landlord's agent, who still refuses to give me the papers edenor demands.
I manage to steal power by running an extension cord out the window to run the basic necessities.
Of course I move out when the lease is up. Landlord's agent chases me down and demands not only rent for last 3 months but some made up amount for electricity I must have used but didn t pay for (nor did the landlord). Also is 'shocked' I didn't tell them I was going to move out. Fucking hilarious.
As I owned a business at that time I grudgingly paid the rent but not the supposed power bill of course. I know enough about argentine courts to know you can get fucked over very easily.
Agent then asks me if she can help me find a new apt. If you can fucking believe that. I called her every obscenity in the book, and a few in english for good measure. She genuinely seemed surprised I was not happy with her service.
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03-27-13 11:12 #29
Posts: 416Originally Posted by Sidney [View Original Post]Originally Posted by Jackson [View Original Post]
This may be the one area where I've actually been lucky here in BsAs!
I've also never had an issue getting repairs agreed by landlords. Getting a decent tradesman who can actually do the repairs, when/if he actually turns up is another matter, but not the landlord's fault. My current landlord is brilliant and calls me every couple of months just to ask if there's anything I need sorting out.
e2a: and at the current exchange rate, my 83sqm loft is quite the steal at USD340/month!
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03-27-13 01:53 #28
Posts: 577Rent From a Gringo
Originally Posted by DaddyRulz [View Original Post]
Tres3.
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03-26-13 21:33 #27
Posts: 2808Only on repairs
Originally Posted by Sidney [View Original Post]
In the second the water heater went out and the building had no portero. I got the portero at a friends building to replace it and I didn't pay anything.
This isn't me saying that long term renting in BsAs is fun, it's a pain in the fucking ass both of the above repair took a shitload of time to get done with the landlord bitching the whole time. If I was a rich guy landlords here would be the thing that would probably make me buy a place, but paying for repairs have never been an issue.
Mis dos, nada mas.
DR.
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03-26-13 18:23 #26
Posts: 2556
Venues: 398I'm not sure how a report on renting houses in the Dominician Republic has any connection with the topic of this thread, which is "Latest thoughts on apts / condos prices in BA", but let's see if I can get the thread back on topic.
Originally Posted by Sidney [View Original Post]
Originally Posted by Sidney [View Original Post]
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09-30-08 20:43 #25
Posts: 3040Let's Ask Someone Who Knows!
I recently paid Prudential Insurance for a (3) year commercial guarantee.
This Argentine company sells these all of the time.
Cost is equal to (1) month of the year's rent.
Times (3) in this case.
It was not cheap and who knows if it will hold water but my landlord asks for (2) separate guarantees on all of his properties!
It is the Retired Argentine Airforce Personnel's Retirement Fund?
F. O. C. M. F. A (I think?)
Water-tight contracts. Like a shark's ass!
A. F. I. P knows everything. Believe me!
Funny thing is that they only own bars and restaurants!
We shall soon see if their little guarantee is bull-shit or not! (Prudential has nothing to do with the American company with the equal sounding name.)
I have not been able to pay my masters in numerous months due to being shut-down and all of the other horse shit!
Partners are needed now! Offering 49% or more to as as many people as possible! Just Joking!
As The Stomach Turns.
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09-30-08 13:43 #24
Posts: 552
Venues: 8Originally Posted by Facundo
I hadn't thought of it before, but I wonder if that has something to do with why the owners rarely accept seguro de caucions, which have been around since the '60s. Maybe the owners feel it exposes them too much to the AFIP's prying eyes?
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09-30-08 13:22 #23
Posts: 54Rental Securitization
Originally Posted by El Queso
Jaggar
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09-30-08 06:40 #22
Posts: 1099Facundo,
Thats a great addition to my report.
Bravo! Thanks a lot. Its really helpful.
Originally Posted by Facundo
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09-30-08 06:13 #21
Posts: 216Originally Posted by Captain
1. Only one bank, El Banco Supervielle, will start offering this type of guaranty beginning next month.
2. It will guaranty to pay the monthly rental from AR$500 – 5000.
3. It will charge a 9% fee (the renter pays 6% and the owner 3%) on the two year total rental amount.
4. The monthly rental will be paid to the bank and the bank in turn will credit the bank account of the apartment or house owner.
5. If the renter doesn't pay, the bank will pay the monthly rental.
At first blush, this type of guaranty appears to be a little expensive. Also, it exposes the owner to the actual amount he is being paid monthly. In my time here, I have not met a single person who doesn't cheat when it comes to anything involving financial transactions. I'm sure someone in the AFIP (similar to the IRS) office will probably look at these guarantees because it will show the actual rental amount being received by the owner.
By the way, if an apartment owner ever tries to screw you on a deposit or whatever, just threaten him with the following words. "I am going to the AFIP office and file a complaint because I know how much I've been paying you monthly and I know you don't report all of it. In addition, I know you've never reported the full transactions of your rental income." Within minutes I received my full deposit back.
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09-29-08 01:42 #20
Posts: 552
Venues: 8Jaggar,
I'm not sure what you're getting at here. Are you thinking that a bunch of getting together in some sort of a bloc (like an S. A. Or something) would give a leverage to bring down the price of the seguro de caucion or something?
BTW - careful thinking about bulk purchases here. They are pretty non-existent with most transactions that I'm aware of. Maybe commercially they are more popular, but as an example, you can't go to a store here and buy a six pack of Coke for less than the cost of six individual cans, and that's about the most simple example of bulk purchasing I know.
Bulk purchasing doesn't seem to apply in retail, maybe it will in commercial venues?
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09-28-08 20:06 #19
Posts: 54No Guarantor
Thanks Captain for this excellent and well-sourced post. I would appreciate hearing from the board a suggested model, whereby 5 or more mongers collectively approach an open minded bank and jointly purchase such "Guantor-Alternative" insurance for their own apartments exercising the scale economic advantage of 5 or more ex pat types. All to buy down the individual insurance cost basis for such.
Input well appreciated.
Cheers,
JaggarLast edited by Jaggar; 09-28-08 at 20:08. Reason: add
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09-28-08 18:40 #18
Posts: 2808Cali
Originally Posted by El Queso
Give the landlord protection in evicting boludos and it turns every rental market into a buyers market. When Austin was badly overbuilt before every other person from California moved there almost all apartments gave away cable, elec, water, home appliances, you name it, anything to entice occupancy.
But again you will never see this in Argentina. It's like decriminalizing weed, the majority understand that it doesn't cause reefer madness and doesn't need to be controlled anymore than booze but for the most part it's suicide for a politician to introduce legislation to change it.
Whoever did it there would immediately be assailed as the politico that wants to throw your grandmother out into the street. Which wouldn't be that bad because if she was fat Flexible Horn would take her in for a day or two.
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09-28-08 16:26 #17
Posts: 552
Venues: 8I agree Daddy. I'm a Texan as well (though living in BsAs).
I heard someone down here recently who was from California tell me that laws there are favoring the renters now and it is more difficult to get freeloaders out of the houses. I'm hoping it doesn't spread.