Gather the operating documents
Start with the current lease, deposit information, keys, utility responsibilities, appliance details, warranties, inspection notes, and recent repair records. If the property is occupied, include the current resident's lease dates and any open maintenance items.
Walk the property honestly
Look at curb appeal, locks, smoke detectors, plumbing, HVAC, appliances, flooring, paint, exterior maintenance, and anything that could affect showings or resident satisfaction. Small details can slow down leasing if they are discovered late.
Be ready for a rent conversation
Pricing should consider more than what an owner hopes to receive. Condition, neighborhood demand, timing, comparable rentals, and vacancy cost all matter. A realistic rent strategy can protect income better than an inflated price that sits.
Helpful next steps
- Share the property address or neighborhood
- Include whether it is vacant, occupied, or coming available soon
- Send known maintenance concerns
- Ask what needs to happen before leasing or management starts
If you want help sorting out the next step, request a property review and send the details you already have.
Use the owner review form and include what you own, whether it is occupied, and what you want handled first.
