Lease Agreement Hide Alternative Choice

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Negotiate with the Landlord You can, however, negotiate removal of your name from the lease with your landlord as long as your co-tenants agree to the revision to the lease. You may be able to pay a penalty in return for your name being removed, but this is entirely in the landlord's discretion.
The Bad News: You Can't Force Someone Off the Lease Unfortunately, if you're a renter, you can't remove someone's name from your lease. ... Your landlord is under no obligation to remove your roommate's name from the lease. But some landlords are willing to remove a person from the lease.
You can, however, negotiate removal of your name from the lease with your landlord as long as your co-tenants agree to the revision to the lease. You may be able to pay a penalty in return for your name being removed, but this is entirely in the landlord's discretion.
Give your landlord notice immediately. ... Tell your landlord the truth: if you need to move out because you simply can't afford the lease without a roommate and can't find one, then just say so.
In general, most landlords won't allow you to break or be taken off a lease once you've cosigned. ... Because it is so difficult to get out of a lease as a cosigner, if you cosign, you must do everything you can to ensure the tenants pay in full and on time.
Breaking the lease might result in the loss of a security deposit. As explained previously, your roommate's misconduct can also be imputed to you, meaning that moving out before the lease expires, causing damage to the unit or not paying rent can cause you to lose your security deposit.
Put it in writing. ... Tip the super. ... Call 311. ... Take your landlord and the city to court. ... Withhold rent. ... Work together with your neighbors. ... Do it yourself.
Even if the lease says you're taking the property as is and the landlord has no obligation to make repairs, those terms are invalid. A lease cannot override the law. If the landlord doesn't maintain a livable a rental, you have grounds to sue. It's probably easier to sue over habitability than emotional distress.
Depending on the laws in your state, you may sue the landlord for the losses associated with the uninhabitable rental premises. ... Depending on the defect, you may also be able to sue your landlord for personal injuries, including pain and suffering, caused by the defective housing conditions.
If a landlord does illegally evict a tenant, the tenant may sue the landlord for trespass, wrongful eviction, assault, battery, slander, libel and the intentional infliction of emotional distress. ... The tenant is entitled to actual money damages for the expenses resulting from the illegal eviction.
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