How to Slash Your Rental Vacancy Rates Baraboo WI

There are the obvious costs to vacant rental properties: paying for the mortgage, insurance, taxes and utilities out of pocket. But the costs don't end there. Rental property vacancies can be crippling to landlords, so it's extremely important to minimize them. Here are 8 tips for cutting weeks or months off your rental vacancies.

Bunbury & Associate Realtors
(608) 356-7720
830 US Hwy 12 Ste 5
Baraboo, WI
Realty Executives
(608) 493-3060
111 E Main St
Merrimac, WI
Re/Max Grand
(608) 356-4100
144 4th AveSte 3
Baraboo, WI
Re/Max Unique Sales
(608) 643-3030
806 Water St
Sauk City, WI
Jenny Persha Eco Realtor
(608) 347-5954
3 Point Place
Madison, WI
Baraboo Area Realty
(608) 355-4155
323 Linn St
Baraboo, WI
First Weber
(608) 742-4897
333 W Wisconsin St
Portage, WI
Re/Max Connections
2616 New Pinery Rd
Portage, WI
Re/Max Preferred
(602) 985-8484
100 E Main St EPO Box 56
La Valle, WI
Shorewest Realtors
(262) 673-3000
1121 E Sumner St
Hartford, WI
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How to Slash Your Rental Vacancy Rates

There are the obvious costs to vacant rental properties: paying for the mortgage, insurance, taxes and utilities out of pocket. But the costs don't end there. Break-ins, vandalism, landscaping, and upkeep are all additional risks and expenses, which all aggregate to a message that you already know — rental vacancies need to be slashed to an absolute minimum.

How is this accomplished? Here are eight things you can do to chop your rental vacancy rate, and keep each property performing well with a solid rental agreement.

Tip 1: Do Your Homework
Here's something else you already know: not all neighborhoods are created equal. Some have higher vacancy rates than others, for reasons ranging from overdevelopment to urban decay, and you need to know a neighborhood's trends BEFORE investing tens of thousands of your dollars in it. Talk to property management companies, appraisers, realtors and anyone else you can find who has their finger on the pulse of the neighborhood you're considering.

Tip 2: Visibility & Location
All real estate investors — and the rest of the world, for that matter — know that location is by far the most important aspect of a property. But you need to consider visibility as part of the location equation, because properties that get more foot traffic and other visibility will get word out faster, and thus bring in the rental application signatures faster. Sure, internet advertising is great — for certain demographics — and newspaper advertising can be effective, but putting up a "For Rent" sign will reach people who already know the area and what the property looks like, from the outside anyway.

Tip 3: Quick Turnaround on Repairs
Every day between when a rental property is vacated and a new rental agreement is signed is money lost for the landlord, so get your handyman or contractor in the property on Day 1 to touch up paint, do any overdue repairs and generally put the property in a fit shape to show. This means maintaining relationships with contractors, and staying in communication with them. This is also a great time to get an edge on your competition by improving your property, as your tenants will only be as good as your rental property.

Tip 4: Price Right
Don't guess what you should charge for rent, because an inappropriate rental amount will either shortchange you or the property will never rent. Look up what other landlords are charging in the area, and maybe even go walk through a few of these properties to see how they compare to yours. Price it right — get it rented — and you'll save yourself a lot of headaches.

Tip 5: Market Your House Appropriately
Who are you trying to reach? If it's an Hispanic neighborhood, maybe you need to advertise in Spanish in the local Spanish newspaper. Many landlords use computers every day — and assume the rest of the world does too — but many lower-end rental applicants don't use the internet at...

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