I know I have a big problem with niceness, it’s part of how I was brought up.
I want to help people. Whether it’s a tenant who’s struggling, or a landlord with a problem.
The problem is, we often let this become our problem…
You need to know where that line is.
Whether it’s in your landlord business or in your life, you need some boundaries!
If you’re a new landlord, and you’re a nice person, you will go the extra mile for your tenants, especially your great tenants. I just caution you, know where you’ve gone too far and know when it’s past the point where their problem has become your problem.
Sometimes it takes an imaginary line in the sand, or a fixed dollar amount or number of days that you can allow a tenant to fall behind. whatever the scenario planning in advance and telling yourself where that limit is can save you money, frustration and wounded feelings later.
Final thought, the problem isn’t you being nice, it’s others using it to their advantage…

In my ongoing experimentation as to how I can best aid and assist all the landlords and followers out there, my intent is to create short little articles like this every Friday.
Depending on timing it may automatically be sent out Friday morning or Saturday morning (if I finish before ten am local it automagically sends notifications that day, otherwise ti goes out the following day).
These shorter posts will be thoughts and reflections of mine, if you like them let me know, if you hate them let me know, if you’re indifferent just sit back and eventually I’ll quite doing them.
There’s an old Polish proverb that says “not my circus, not my monkeys”. If you understand this proverb, you know you have to fire a tenant in certain situations.
Ideally you’re visiting your property and doing at least a quick inspection every three to six months, but worst case you need to at least get in there yearly, even if they seem like great tenants!
There’s nothing as annoying as getting interrupted when you’re out having a nice evening out with a spouse or girlfriend or even your family. It’s worse when it’s your tenant calling about a problem with the furnace, in minus 20 degree weather.
Should you be self managing your property or should you be paying a management company to deal with your property? It’s a question that comes up quite often around here and there really is no one answer that fits everyone.
Throw in extra costs for signing in new tenants, possible showing fees, extra charges for coordinating repairmen and it doesn’t take too long for a low cash flowing property to suddenly start losing money.
The priorities you need to stay on top of are obviously going to be incomes and expenses, so at the very least any property management system requires the ability to track those.
If you like to spend a couple weeks in the Caribbean during the winter months or perhaps you spend the summer at the cottage you still have tenants in place and a property to worry about if you self manage.
As the stock markets react with fear, uncertainty and turmoil to the election results, it should be comforting to you as a landlord that your property values are essentially the same as yesterday.
Before we get too deep into talking about some financing strategy for your rental property I need to point out the obvious.
There are only two ways to improve your cash flow on any property. Either increase your rents, lower your expenses or do a combination of both.
This is where a couple simple strategies can pay huge dividends and the first one to talk about is switching to bi-weekly payments from a single monthly mortgage payment. Note I said bi-weekly versus bi-monthly which is a big difference.
current or future rental properties let’s jump right in.
