Thinking About Renting Your House Instead of Selling? Read This First. - Venessa James

Thinking About Renting Your House Instead of Selling? Read This First.

Thinking About Renting Your House Instead of Selling? Read This First. Simplifying The Market

If your house is on the market but you havent gotten any offers youre comfortable with, you may be wondering: what do I do if it doesnt sell? And for a growing number of homeowners, thats turning into a new dilemma: should I just rent it instead?

Theres a term for this in the industry, and its called an accidental landlord. Heres how Yahoo Finance defines it:

These accidental landlords are homeowners who tried to sell but couldnt fetch the price they wanted and instead have decided to rent out their homes until conditions improve.

Why This Is Happening More Often Right Now

And right now, the number of homeowners turning into accidental landlords is rising. Business Insider explains why:

While there have always been accidental landlords . . . an era of middling home sales brought on by a steep rise in borrowing rates is minting a new wave of reluctant rental owners."

Basically, sales have slowed down as buyers struggle with todays affordability challenges. And thats leaving some homeowners with listings that sit and go stale. And if they don't want to drop their price to try to appeal to buyers, they may rent instead.

But heres the thing you need to remember if renting your house has crossed your mind. Becoming a landlord wasnt your original plan, and theres probably a reason for that. It comes with a lot more responsibility (and risk) than most people expect.

So, if you find yourself toying with that option, ask yourself these questions first:

1. Does Your House Have Potential as a Profitable Rental?

Just because you can rent it doesnt mean you should. For example:

  • Are you moving out of state? Managing maintenance from far away isnt easy.
  • Does the home need repairs before its rental-ready? And do you have the time or the funds for that?
  • Is your neighborhood one that typically attracts renters, and would your house be profitable as one?

If any of those give you pause, its a sign selling might be the better move.

2. Are You Ready To Be a Landlord?

On paper, renting sounds like easy passive income. In reality, it often looks more like this:

  • Midnight calls about clogged toilets or broken air conditioners
  • Chasing down missed rent payments
  • Damage youll have to fix between tenants

As Redfin notes:

Landlords have to fix things like broken pipes, defunct HVAC systems, and structural damage, among other essential repairs. If you dont have a few thousand dollars on hand to take care of these repairs, you could end up in a bind.

3. Have You Thought Through the True Costs?

According to Bankrate, here are just a few of the hidden costs that come with renting out your home:

  • A higher insurance premium (landlord insurance typically costs about 25% more)
  • Management fees (if you use a property manager, they typically charge around 10% of the rent)
  • Maintenance and advertising to find tenants
  • Gaps between tenants, where you cover the mortgage without rental income coming in

All of that adds up, fast.

While renting can be a smart move for the right person with the right house, if youre only considering it because your listing didnt get traction, there may be a better solution: talking to your current agent and revisiting the pricing strategy on your house first.

With their advice you can rework your strategy, relaunch at the right price, and attract real buyers to make the sale happen.

Bottom Line

Before you decide to rent your house, make sure to carefully weigh the pros and cons of becoming a landlord. For some homeowners, the hassle (and the expense) may not be worth it. 

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