Forum Discussion
- rk911Explorer
rldself wrote:
Preparing for our first winter in AZ. Renting home fully furnished for 6 to 9 months. Anyone rented their home furnished? What did you store? Pictures left on walls? Knick Knacks left on shelves? Working hard preparing and purging lots of stuff. Any advice welcome.
we haven't done that nor would we consider doing that but if we did we'd remove anything that we couldn't replace...photos, heirlooms, special electronics and so forth. good luck. do you have a local property manager to look in on the property every month? have a clearly written lease agreement? - rldselfExplorerWe have a long term renter (like a son) living in attached apartment and he will be overseeing the house for us. Yes, we will have a very good lease agreement. We have prepared an attached storage shed that is dry and sturdy to store our stuff. Advertised it as fully furnished with dishes, bedding, towels, etc. Just wasn't sure about decorative items.
- rk911ExplorerI'd advise to remove anything you can't afford or don't want to lose.
- LwiddisExplorer III would not rent my home. To each his/her own.
- lizzieExplorerWe rent our NC home on a seasonal basis when we are not using it. Our nearest neighbor manages it for us. It is completely furnished and in four years we have not had any problems: We have a downstairs shop, a bathroom closet, and a garage cabinet that locks. We went through the house and removed everything that we felt we would really regret losing/breaking, etc, and locked it up in these places. We also purchased a fireproof file cabinet for the shop to store private papers. (Think about what you would grab if your house was on fire.)Getting the house ready to rent was one of the best experiences of our lives. It helped us to prioritize, downsize, and move toward living simpler. lizzie
- rldselfExplorerLizzie, that is exactly what I am finding about prioritizing all of our stuff. Ever bag or box removed makes me feel freer and ready for our adventure. The kids are delighted because it will be less stuff to sort for them when we pass on. If we love this new RV life we may completely downsize and sell the house. If we don't we come home, unpack and have less stuff! Do you leave pictures on the wall? This is an academic town and our applicants our professionals with the university. NOT students.
- Bob_OlallawaExplorerWow, if it were the home in AZ you were renting that would be one thing. Since it is your primary home I would think anything you want to stay private should be locked down, either at the home or in storage. I wouldn't do it with the primary home but would with a winter home...
- K_CharlesExplorerWe rent out the house next door and I don't think I would rent our house out unless we knew the people very well. We have had good and not so good tenants. Our daughter started renting it a few years ago so she watches this place when we are away
- samsontdogExplorerI would never rent our private Home but I do rent out my Park Models in AZ. I only rent for the Snowbird Season { 6 months} to Seniors , no smoking and no animals. I leave nic naks, pictures etc out or on walls. I have been a Landlord for 15 yrs with very few problems to speak of
- NaioExplorer III have done this and plan to again. Of course you will store whatever is precious to you.
As for what to keep in the house, different tenants want different things. Just ask them. And tell prospects, when you show the house, that what you leave is negotiable. Some people want sheets, towels, cookware, artwork, etc. Some have their own and want space for them.
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