This is my reality of renting.
We rent our home. It’s not going to change for the foreseeable future and frankly, it sucks. Don’t get me wrong, it also has a positive side but these days I find it hard to remember what that is. I’m sure it will come to me at some point.
I have been paying rent since I was 18 years old. So I’m pretty well versed, at 33, in all the less than delightful aspects of being a tenant.
The first craptastic part to renting is finding a suitable place to rent. It used to be a bit of a smorgasbord- loads of places to choose from. Now, Sydney seems to have a scarcity of rental properties and the ones that are available are charged at a premium. You have to go to an open house with 35 other desperate families where you smile and nod at one another, while hoping they don’t get the place and you do- provided it’s not some godawful place with a toilet in the kitchen. Unless that’s all that’s available in which case, you and the 35 other families embark on a Hunger Games style battle to prove to the property manager that you are the most worthy tribute to the house with its gloriously convenient kitchen-toilet.
Once all prospective tenants have fought to the death in the (probably very overgrown and weed-choked) back garden and you have emerged the victor, you get the dubious joy of the Inspection Report to contend with. This is where the disinterested real estate property manager has listed all the parts of your new rental home that are broken, damaged, dirty, worn or in some other way crappily outstanding. You then get to go through it, disagree and try to fit your reason in a box that was clearly designed for show only and not actual use. For example, in a previous house I had to explain that the kitchen cupboard shelves were not in good repair at all and were, in fact, being held together with surgical dressing tape. As were the canvas outdoor blinds. In fact, most of that house was held together with surgical tape. I’m not sure why but I can tell you that surgical tape is pretty ordinary at holding bits of house together.
Top Comments
I have lived in various places in the world. The first time a landlord announced himself for a "routine inspection", I was quite surprised. When I inquired if there's a particular reason for this, perhaps a sale of the flat, he explained to me that in Australia it's normal that landlords come around every 3 months. I thought he was joking, but it turned out, he wasn't. It's sad to see that Australians seem to think it's normal, and just go along with it. It's not. It's disgusting to be treated like one isn't capable to look after a place, and on top of that, add stuff like described in this article, where landlords neglect their responsibilities, but have the audacity to check on you that you don't wreck the shithole.
I rented a house from hell in Haberfield, it was dangerously full of mould in every room, cold drafts through the floor boards, no proper kitchen or functioning laundry, and the sewerage would occasionally erupt up through the outside drains, it got worse during rainy season, and landlord (who lived around the corner) took 2 months to do anything about it. It ended up being burst old pipes, issue was it was right at our back door at the kitchen, so very unhygienic and limited access to our back yard and clothesline. I too felt if I complained, I would be kicked out, this is a result of a landlords market.