Showing posts with label Lets Talk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lets Talk. Show all posts

9 tenancy rights every student should know | Lets Talk

Moving into your own parent-free home for the very first time is hugely exciting, but it is a serious step. This means it’s extremely important to know your rights when it comes to renting your digs. A few facts can go a long way to preventing you from losing time, money - and your patience. Pump equipment specialists, Pump Sales Direct offer their best advice:


1. Fire regulations
Your landlord must ensure that you are as safe as possible in the event of a fire. This means that you must have an adequate escape route and, if applicable, access to fire extinguishers. You must also have a minimum of one smoke alarm on each floor. It is advisable to check out who is responsible for maintaining the smoke alarms before signing your tenancy agreement.

2. Appliances
All gas appliances must be tested each year and a Gas Safe certificate should be kept in the property to show that this is the case. Make sure that you ask your landlord to show you this before you sign your tenancy agreement.

Your landlord is also responsible for ensuring that electrical installations are not dangerous and any portable appliances supplied, such as toasters or kettles, need to be PAT tested each year.

3. Carbon monoxide
Your landlord must fit carbon monoxide alarms in any room where there is a solid fuel appliance. Gas boilers are not covered by these regulations, although it would be advisable to buy your own alarm to position near these, if your landlord refuses.

4. Infestations
Unwanted guests probably won’t be unusual during your student years but some could be more irksome than others, such as bedbugs, rats, and mice. Thankfully, if you get such an infestation, it is often your landlord’s job to sort out the problem, as long as you didn’t cause the issue yourself. When it comes to bedbugs, for example, the responsibility falls to the person who brought in the affected furniture.

Most infestations can be solved with the help of private companies or through individual actions but rat problems should be reported to your local authority.

5. Decorating
You will need to get written landlord permission before you decorate. Many will give this but may want you to return the property to the original condition before you leave.

Just be wary of spending too much money on things such as decorating, especially if you are only likely to be living in a property for a short time. Whilst it may be essential to ask your landlord to invest in good quality equipment to ensure that the plumbing in your property operates efficiently - and you can have a decent shower - changing walls from beige to blue isn’t normally an essential expenditure.

6. Landlord visits
Your landlord may own your property, but that doesn’t give him the right to just wander in whenever he wants to. In fact, he must give you a reasonable period of notice if he wants to inspect the property or carry out some repairs. Your tenancy agreement should say what this period is.

7. Accidents
You should report anything dangerous at the property to your landlord as soon as possible. In most cases, this will result in the problems being solved.

If you have an accident that you didn’t cause, you could seek legal advice in order to make a claim for compensation.

8. Evictions
Your landlord does have some legal rights when it comes to evicting you - but so do you. Whilst you can be evicted for not paying your rent or breaching your tenancy agreement, for example, there are still procedures that your landlord must adhere to in order to remove you from the property legally.

The procedures that must be followed will depend on the kind of tenancy agreement that you have, so it is important to seek legal advice if you are told you are being evicted.

9. Notice to leave
If your landlord decides that he wants you out of the property, he must notify you in a certain way, including particular warnings and information. How he gives you notice will, again, depend on the kind of tenancy agreement you have and the terms it contains. If you feel you are being unfairly treated, you can seek advice from the Citizens Advice Bureau.

If you want to vacate the property before the end of your contract, you may have to pay your rent for the remaining term, unless you can reach an arrangement with your landlord, or you can prove that your landlord has done something wrong, such as breaching the terms of your tenancy agreement.

*Guest Post

Would you drop out of uni? | Lets talk

Two post in one week?! That's right I am back and totally ready to get some amazing content out there for you lovely lot. I have wanted to write a post like this for a while and just haven't gotten around to doing so, the reason I want to write a post like this it to show people that dropping out of university isn't the end of the world and it is more common than you think. Despite not actually dropping out myself although I have contemplated it more times than I can count on one hand. The reason I didn't is still a mystery to myself as I find it hard to focus on the subject I have chosen and wish in first year I had decided to change instead of the advice I was given which was 'stick with it'.



With the research of My Voucher Codes I decided to find out why people want to drop out in their first year of university and if they actually would do it. My Voucher Codes took a survey of 1200 to find out their thoughts on the matter, and found out just under a third weren't planning on returning to university after Christmas. Which to me is a crazily high number, but there must be a reason as to why these people don't want to return? The Independent suggests being around strangers and studying away from home can just be too much overwhelming experience for some people which totally makes sense. I chose to study in my local town for this exact reason knowing that the changes would be too big for me to handle and I probably would of dropped out if this was the case.

Being at university can be a fun experience for those that make friends easily but what about those who don't? It makes sense for them to leave if university isn't what they thought it be like. In another case it can often be that people can't cope without their parents guidance and end up not knowing how to cook and spending all of their student money in the first week and then having to survive on rice for the next three months, isn't appealing at all.

For those who drop out because they don't like their course or the place where they are studying is something that rings true with myself, but the good news with these people some of them change course and end up completing their degree or end up changing campus and finding it a lot better, it is just about what works for you as a person. Those who drop out completely also end up finding alternative routes to their dream careers, including apprenticeships or just working their way up the career ladder which totally works too. Plus you're not broke for the entire time, bonus!

Although I wouldn't recommend dropping out of university to be a decision which you take lightly one bad month doesn't mean your whole course will suck, but sometimes the only way to be happy is to walk away, and that is something which is totally fine.

Did you consider dropping out in first year?  


*In collaboration with My Voucher Codes