The_Conductor wrote: » If your property fails the HAP inspection- it doesn't qualify for HAP- however, then you have the trouble of trying to remove the tenant- who may decide this is an opportune time not to pay rent at all. HAP is a mess- for numerous reasons- but mostly because it puts all the risk on the landlord- for very little benefit. E.g. 1. Its paid in arrears 2. You may or may not get a deposit 3. The tenant pays their portion of the rent directly to the council/local authority 3(b). If the tenant doesn't pay their portion- the landlord gets nothing whatsoever- the local authority stop payments altogether 4. The HAP inspection normally involves bringing a property up to current specs- if you were letting it privately it only has to meet the specs relevant to a building of its age. E.g. ventillation built into window frames may not be acceptable- you need separate ventillation for any habitable room, a fan on the same circuit as lighting for the bathroom- is verbotten, it has to be on a separate circuit. The Kiddie CO detectors- and/or fire alarms- that you get in B&Q/Woodies etc- are not acceptable- you need the commercial ones that have the 10 year batteries etc etc etc If you have doubts about the tenant- before you ever get going on the scheme- forget it. If you get a good tenant on the scheme- they could be brilliant. In the OP's case- where the tenant is acting the maggot making deductions from the rent before they are ever on the scheme- just picture what'll happen if they do this with their portion of the rent for the local authority- the landlord will get nothing whatsoever- its not that they get the local authority portion of the rent- they get nothing whatsoever..........
peaches08 wrote: » Hi thanks for both your replies, I will call the council tomorrow and tell them I don't meet the criteria ( tax cert, house standard etc) and there is no law stating you have to accept or forcing you to accept HAP
peaches08 wrote: » the tenant posted me up all the documents, you have to have tax clearance, ( or provide it within 5 months I think ) meet the min standards ( house was built 12 years ago regular 3 bed in an estate and it's a nice house.) and be registered with the tenancy board. I don't have tax cert, also your insurance goes up with HAP and also the min standards can cost if the house is not up to their standards I've been reading some nightmare stories though I'm sure they are pretty old house regarding inspections. thanks
gizmo81 wrote: » If your property is not currently meeting minimum standards I wouldn't be saying that out loud let alone as a reason to reject HAP.
The_Conductor wrote: » The 10 year battery CO detectors, retrofitting ventillation into bedrooms which have ventillation in the window frames that was compliant when the units were built etc- are all fine under current regs for renting- but not for HAP.It is not the case that HAP = Minimum renting standards- they can be quite onerous if a unit was built in the late 80s/early 90s- before the building regs changed- but perfectly acceptable for rental purposes. Edit: Landlords should also be cognisant of the new requirements which came in on the 1st July- applicable to all new tenancies, HAP or otherwise.
gizmo81 wrote: » I've heard this on boards a bit but haven't come across it in real life. A 10 year battery is €25? No?
Grolschevik wrote: » Also, obtaining a tax clearance cert is as simple as contacting the Revenue by phone or through ROS. Wouldn't really cut it as an excuse.
second I have no tax clear cert ( going through a divorce, it's a big mess)
the_syco wrote: » I'm guessing that Peaches08 would have to supply both theirs and their other halves tax for the year to get this? But as they're going through a divorce, I can see the other half not playing ball in that regard, and thus no tax cert.
peaches08 wrote: » Your insurance goes up. ( double I have been quoted for my area, seemly some insurers think HAP tenants or know HAP tenants wreck houses, I do not agree with this, it's another way the insurance companies screw you )
circular flexing wrote: » I don't believe this for a second. I'm insured with Aviva and they didn't ask what kind of tenants I had, just that it was rented out. The insurance is more expensive than owner-occupied but I assume it's the same for all policies.
goodvibes wrote: » Hello There Just looking for some info on Rent supplement & Hap I'm looking to rent an apartment or small house in Dublin or Wicklow ....which do Landlords prefer The Hap or Rent supplement ? going by the posts here it seems not Hap ? any info on renting with either would be appreciated.... Thanks in advance....
The_Conductor wrote: » It is illegal for a landlord to discriminate against you because you're looking to avail of HAP or Rent Supplement. It is not illegal for a landlord to seek 4-6 months rent as a deposit- and use that as a discriminatory mechanism.
peaches08 wrote: » you're not obliged to take a HAP tenant, it's up to any landlord who they want to accept as a tenant, NOT THE LA You can also ask for whatever deposit you feel necessary Social Welfare or private renters. It's up to the landlord, when the council own the houses they can do what they want then regarding deposits etc. The council have clearly created HAP to get people off the social housing list as a Landlord you are NOT obliged to accept HAP It's a joke you would really want to be some soft touch to accept HAP with the way it's structured. Why would anyone accept a HAP tenant over a private renter? Are they going to sue every landlord that doesn't have HAP tenants, this country is a complete joke with the people they have creating these schemes.
Graham wrote: » You may want to familiarise yourself with the law before making such blanket statements. Like it or not, a landlord cannot discriminate against SW tenants.
peaches08 wrote: » @Gizmo81 Again no Landlord is obliged to accept HAP but yes they can't discriminate against a person, it's totally up to the person who OWNS the property who they choose to live in it and what deposit, reference etc they require.. It's up to the government to sort the housing crisis out, why should private LL do it for them? Go and use the tax money they are charging to build properties for HAP tenants. HAP is not worth it for any LL to be involved.
gizmo81 wrote: » In bold, this statement is quite broad, would this cover a landlord looking for excessive deposits, looking for work references etc??