Inherited tenants can be a blessing or a curse — and sometimes they fall somewhere in between. Some investors refuse to buy a property if it means inheriting tenants. Others, with proper vetting, see them as a head start on cash flow.

When Inherited Tenants Are an Advantage

If a real estate investor can confirm the following, an inherited tenant might be perfectly acceptable:

Workarounds When You Can't Confirm Everything

If the lease agreements don't exist

Have the tenants sign Estoppel Agreements. (Best practices for these are a separate topic, but make sure the agreement is specific about ownership of appliances — otherwise the appliances you thought came with the property might grow legs and walk away.)

If current rent is below market

  1. Tell the tenant the rent will rise when the current lease expires. Soften it with comp data and offer to phase the increase in. In Maryland, even without rent control, if your lease has an automatic renewal clause, the landlord must notify you of a rent increase or any other change with enough notice for you to decide whether you want to renew.
  2. Maintain the current rent for a period of time to build goodwill and encourage continued tenancy.
  3. If the unit's condition doesn't support market rent, accept the cost of a vacancy plus repairs and don't renew.

If You Decide Against Inheriting Tenants

Negotiation Best Practices

After Closing

The Gray Area

The hardest call is the cost-benefit analysis on a near-perfect tenant with one issue. Long-time, quiet, always pays on time — but smokes indoors, and the smoke is permeating the second unit of a duplex. Or has an aggressive dog. There is no one-size-fits-all answer; you weigh the risk of vacancy and a less-known replacement against the friction of the existing arrangement.

Heads up

This article is for general information only and is not legal advice. Consult appropriate professionals before purchasing rental property.

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