Rental Agents/Realtors in Davis
Jul. 26th, 2006 10:21 amDoes anyone know of any rental agency other than Veri Realty that I can check out for my landlord? He isn't getting many bites at all on his CraigsList ad and we're both getting worried about the 1st floor not being occupied on September 1. (I don't know why the lack of response when it's a pet-friendly, free garage/off-street parking, queer/poly friendly, free in-house laundry 3-bedroom for a great price. What more can he offer??) He can't pay the mortage without a tenant in there.
He used to use Veri to rent the place out, but Veri is on a different business model now and they charge the landlord $1000 to rent it. He definitely can't afford it. Are there any others that work with Davis properties that I could look into that might be more affordable?
PS- I'm showing the apartment this evening 7:00 PM to 8:15 PM if anyone's interested.
He used to use Veri to rent the place out, but Veri is on a different business model now and they charge the landlord $1000 to rent it. He definitely can't afford it. Are there any others that work with Davis properties that I could look into that might be more affordable?
PS- I'm showing the apartment this evening 7:00 PM to 8:15 PM if anyone's interested.
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Date: 2006-07-26 02:41 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-07-26 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 02:54 pm (UTC)Have you tried listing the apartment with the real estate offices at the local universities? I know a lot of faculty and grad students from out of state depend on the listings there.
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Date: 2006-07-26 02:54 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-07-26 04:19 pm (UTC)http://boston.craigslist.org/abo/186147478.html (http://boston.craigslist.org/abo/186147478.html)
They can come see it tonight if they want. The next showing will be this Saturday, 11AM to 1:00PM (unless it rents tonight)
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Date: 2006-07-26 04:20 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-07-26 04:24 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-07-26 04:32 pm (UTC)He used to get $3000 for it in the late-90s, because the economy was great and people were willing and able to pay top dollar to live in Davis. Now not many people could afford $3000 a month for rent. The price has dropped gradually since 2001. We've has 4 tenants in the last 5 years (all Tufts/MIT students who graduated and moved on), and each paid a little less than the one before because desperation drove my landlord to drop the price each time. But he can't go any lower than $1800.
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Date: 2006-07-26 04:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 04:40 pm (UTC)In any case, the nice part is that he can talk to multiple agents without committing to any exclusively, so there can be various places working on renting the place. He can use Zen as well as my office and whomever else.
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Date: 2006-07-26 05:02 pm (UTC)Anyhow, did you look at similar CL ads? There are an awful lot of 3-bedrooms being offered for $1500 and $1600, many with half fee and most with parking/dishwasher/laundry. There are few ads for 1800+. So it seems the price is barely competetive.
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Date: 2006-07-26 06:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 06:23 pm (UTC)Hopefully your landlord can rent it for 1800, but if he can't, then at some point he needs to determine if he can afford to lose 1800 a month or something like 200 a month by reducing the rent.
From my experience moving around Davis Sq (three apartments in the last 4 years), rents seem to have been fairly stable ... well, maybe it's gone down a bit because landlords seem to pick up half or full fees now.
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Date: 2006-07-26 06:37 pm (UTC)My landlord has been trying to avoid the fee altogether by finding tenants ourselves without an agent, but we having gotten many applications. Granted, it's a September rental and we're not even into August yet. But I think he should cover all bases and enlist some agency help.
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Date: 2006-07-26 07:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 08:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 09:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-26 09:20 pm (UTC)If the landlord was really interested in making money, maybe he should have sold the place a few years ago when the market was crazy.
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Date: 2006-07-26 09:23 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-07-26 10:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-27 12:06 am (UTC)I don't doubt that you are telling the truth but $3,000 / MO for a 3 bedroom apartment in that house in that area is insane no matter what the economy was doing, unless the place is nothing short of the taj mahal! I have been in Somerville since 1990 and I think that is some sort of a record. Once in a while a landlord is able to get some crazy amount for rent from students who need a place at the last minute and are desperate, but once they realize what is going on and the lease is up the always move out.
i highly recommend...
Date: 2006-07-27 01:56 am (UTC)His office is right in Davis near the Store 24.
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Date: 2006-07-27 04:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-27 04:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-27 11:51 am (UTC)Oh, and in my experience, salaries do not go up when the housing market goes up. Sometimes it does, but not necessarily. Certainly if one was a dot com bust victim (like my geek husband), one's salary would have likely have taken a dramatic drop just when housing/rental prices skyrocketed this last time. The reason that the real estate market shot up so fast was that there was a small number of rich young people from the suburbs who decided to move into the city because it was "hip" (while keeping their high salary jobs in the suburbs). They bought houses at exorbitant costs and then had to charge exorbitant rents for the other apartments to cover their monstrous mortgages. The rest of the landlords raised their rents, too, because they could. More hipster wannabees from the suburbs moved into those high rent places, leaving us poor saps who lived and worked in the city (and earned average salaries), as well as many non-rich stufents, pretty darned screwed. Many gave up and moved into their parents houses, or to other less expensive parts of the country. The rest of us downsized, and learned to live with 50-70% of our salries being gobbled up by rent.
However, I completely agree with you that the goverment's analysis of the unemployment problem is lacking in intelligence and accuracy. Not only are they not accurately measuring underemployment, but they also don't even properly measure actual unemployment. They only count people recieving unemployment benefits, which is only available to a small percentage of people who can't get jobs! But, when your country outsources all it's jobs to third and second world countries to save money, it's not surprising that we're losing jobs...
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Date: 2006-07-27 12:41 pm (UTC)Seriously, what is up with that? I mean, if somebody posted here saying "I saw this 3bed for $1800, it didn't look that great to me, is that a reasonable price?" and you wanted to say that sounded absurd to you, that would be one thing. You'd be helping somebody out. And on this thread just to say that the price sounds to high is your perogative, even though it's obvious that people disagree with you. But to go to these lengths of argument to insist that nobody in their right minds would ever now or possibly in the past have paid such high rents and the landlord is obviously rotten and hard-hearted -- as if you're doing your best to deep-six this community member's attempt to help out her landlord and find fellow housemates she can get along with -- seems unjustified, unsupportive and unkind.
It's the general tone of this part of the discussion, not your particular comments/arguments, that's really bugging me here.
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Date: 2006-07-27 02:16 pm (UTC)We're not at all implying that the landlord is a bad person, just that the ad made it sound like it might not be the kind of place we'd want to rent. That's all. I'm sorry you didn't appreciate our thoughts. Hopefully, Peaceblossom is able to see our constructive ciritcisms as being helpful to her cause.
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Date: 2006-07-27 02:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-27 03:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-27 03:31 pm (UTC)Seriously, my landlord is wonderful. He hasn't raised my rent in 6 years, nor the rent of the person in the 2nd floor apartment. I'm very lucky.
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Date: 2006-07-27 05:23 pm (UTC)It's not a big deal. We all know how easy it is to misread tone on LJ. Nor do I have any personal stake in the argument, and it's not criticism (constructive or otherwise) of me, so you really don't need to be "apologizing." I just think it's ridiculous, that's all. Tthe argument was peculiarly unbalanced, and I wanted to offer another voice.
I also looked back and saw that the last two apt rentals placed on this community were for $600 for a room in a 3bed and $590 for a place in a 4bed. So calling this price "not competitive" still makes no sense to me.
Dezray DeCarlo
Date: 2006-07-29 05:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-30 03:24 am (UTC)I just rented a lovely 3-bed first-floor in the Ball Square/Powderhouse area for 1650. It might be time for your landlord to consider bringing down the price just a tad. Even 1750 would hit a whole new level of hits for renters using CL. We looked at a whole range of stuff, with the top of our range being 1700, and there were a few other nice places out there in the same range that the apartment might need to be really big or super super cool to get people to spring for 1800 these days. I'd have been willing for my personal rent share to be higher if we'd found an 1800 with a small study, or a second bathroom, for example.
We used Apartment Rental Experts, and I also have heard very good recs for John Lowenstein of Red Line Realty. Last time around I used Maven and they were fine, too. Veri is IMHO the bottom of the barrel of Davis-area realtors.
Also your landlord should be aware that these days, a lot more apartments are going for half-fee to tenant rather than full fee. To many tenants, full-fees simply get ruled out at the get-go.
I also second the recs that you get pics online. I fell in love with my soon-to-be-new home on the basis of its craigslist pics, and the visit was more a confirmation of its awesomeness.