hi! I want to become a freelance rental property manager on the Florida panhandle. Basically I will rent peoples’ condos and beach houses out for them, make sure they are clean, and arrange maintenance and things like that.
Does anyone know:
How/what percentage I get paid (ie 10% of the rental rate or cleaning fees, etc)?
Do I need any additional certificates (I have a BA in Bus Admin/Marketing)?
What laws go along with this?
Will the renter pay me directly then I pay the owner or vice-versa?
ANY INFO OR HELP WILL BE GREATLY APPRECIATED!
THANK YOU!
Many renters have complained of the management entering their apartment without notice and while they were gone. This is the Indigo Pines Plantation in Daytona Beach. Is there a law in Florida that protect that? Also, would the lease be able to waiver that right? Would you be able to remove that aspect from the lease and still rent?
i have been living in the wingren village apartments already for 3yrs and 6mths. he just recently came out of jail and the apartment manager told me that there was an ordinance for the city of irvign stating that felons are not allowed to live here. if this is true where can i find this?
I have seven years experience as both an Assistant Property Manager for a 200-unit apartment community and as Manager of a 263-space manufactured home community. Im looking to relocate to Florida and would like some insight into salary expecations in metro areas. Can anyone shed some light?
I rent an apartment in a gated community in Orange County, California. Every tenant is assigned 1 covered parking spot; open parking spots are available to additional cars on a first come first serve basis. Parking in our community has always been saturated; often, people would have to park along the curb of the narrow apartment drive because all open spaces are occupied by 8:00 PM. Our former apartment manager was good about accommodating parking needs-she assigned herself a less accessible covered parking spot and left the accessible ones to the tenants. She seldom used open parking spaces.
Our new apartment manager is not as considerate as the old one. Right off the bat, she assigned the best open parking spot to herself, thereby taking away one viable parking space for tenants with more than 1 car. Mind you, she is not handicapped. Do property managers have this right to give themselves the best parking privileges at the expense of tenants?
Please note that the manager also has a covered parking spot in addition to the open parking spot she has assigned to herself.
