How Landlords Can Prevent Illegal Activity in Their Rental Property

How Landlords Can Prevent Illegal Activity in Their Rental Property

This two-minute read looks at how landlords can keep their property safe from criminals and dodgy dealers.

Every landlord has lost sleep worrying about what goes on in their rental property when they’re not around.
 
There’s always a flicker of fear that a tenant – no matter how trustworthy they seem – might turn out to be a nightmare and cause damage to the property.
 
But carpet stains and chipped paint could be the least of a landlord’s worries in the scheme of things.
 
If criminals use your property for illegal activity, you could wind up with an expensive repair bill and a starring role in a court case. (And if the property is designated a crime scene, it could be off-limits for weeks while police investigate.)
 
While most tenants are law-abiding citizens, with criminals employing ever more sophisticated tactics, it’s worth being on your guard.
 
Rental properties are sometimes used for:
  • Drug production. Over the past 20 years, there’s been a steady increase in the use of domestic properties for cannabis farms or meth labs.
  • Drug dealing.
  • People trafficking.
  • Gambling dens or the sale of illicit cigarettes and alcohol.
 
What to do if you’re suspicious
Don’t bury your head in the sand. If the authorities can prove you were aware of the illegal activity taking place at your property but took no action, there could be severe repercussions.
 
Contact the relevant authority and keep a note of what you’ve seen or heard (but don’t play detective, leave that to the experts).
 
Look out for
  • Tenants with long, convoluted stories as to why they can’t show you the appropriate ID.
  • Tenants who install their own deadbolts, CCTV or alarms, and are dead against you arranging a planned property inspection.
  • Blacked-out windows and unusual smells. Meth labs can smell like cat’s wee, while cannabis farms have a distinctive, sweet odour.
  • Changes to the wiring (cannabis farmers often rejig it to bypass the electricity meter).
 
Proactive steps
  • Have a rigorous tenant screening process.
  • Run a mile from tenants offering to pay several months’ rent in advance in cash.
  • Carry out regular inspections.
  • Do things by the book. Criminals are looking for landlords who are lax or absent.
  • Build good relations with the neighbours. They could be the first to notify you if something fishy is going on.
  • Trust your instincts.

Next Steps
If you are first time landlord and unsure of what to expect or the most common pitfalls, download our "6 Mistakes to Avoid When Choosing a Letting or Management Agency".

 If this all feels like a tall order, you could get an experienced letting agent to manage your property.
 
That way, you can sleep easy knowing that your investment is safe.
 
From all of us here at Sure Sales & Lettings, don’t have nightmares and thanks for reading.





Get in touch with us

When estate agents tell sellers not to over-personalise their property, what do they mean? Here’s a real-life tale that explains all.

Property experts often advise sellers to style their home before they put it on the market. Go the extra mile with presentation, and buyers will be impressed by what they see and smell, or so the theory goes. But do the same styling rules apply to landlords hoping to attract top tenants to their buy-to-let?

When considering the purchase of a ‘doer-upper’ – a property that requires refurbishment – landlords are often faced with a Shakespearean (ish) question: “To buy, or not to buy?”

The Bank of England meets tomorrow (Thursday 7 November) to set the official Bank Rate or base rate as it is also known. This is the rate that banks and building societies use to set the interest rates they charge borrowers.