A FLAT advert says the new tenant must leave the house for SIX HOURS a day leaving renters gobsmacked. A listing in Wellington, New Zealand, was looking for renters prepared to pay $400 per week for a room they could only use outside of the hours between 9am and 3pm. The description of the 22sqm […]
A FLAT advert says the new tenant must leave the house for SIX HOURS a day leaving renters gobsmacked.
A listing in Wellington, New Zealand, was looking for renters prepared to pay $400 per week for a room they could only use outside of the hours between 9am and 3pm.
The description of the 22sqm studio apartment originally stated the other flatmate would use this property for “personal uses” between 9am and 3pm Monday to Friday and would prefer “exclusive” use during that time.
The listing also stated the flat’s desk could only be used by the current flatmate.
But it then changed to not include the current roomate’s preference.
Tenancy Services compliance and investigations national manager in New Zealand Steve Watson said the listing is likely not against the law.
“On first look at the advertisement online, it looks like this is for a flatmate (rather than a tenant), so wouldn’t be covered by the Residential Tenancies Act.
“The Residential Tenancies Act 1986 (the Act) only covers tenants and landlords, not flatmates.”
Kiwi Renters United Spokesperson Ashok Jacob called the listing “a joke”.
“It is just another example of the overcrowding caused by the severe housing shortage.”
Jacob said although the specifics of the flat were quite odd the housing problem is so widespread it is not surprising.
“We are seeing this sort of thing all the time and it is quite upsetting.”
He told the Herald they had been advocating to the Ministry of Business and Innovation (MBIE) for improvements in the sector.
“We have been advocating for just generally increased tenant protections.
“I think a lot of the overcrowding problem is a direct result of the severe lack of supply which is also why we’re campaigning for tens of thousands of state houses to be built immediately.”
Jacob told the New Zealand Herald although he thought the ad was an abuse it wasn’t useful blaming the person who posted the listing given the systemic issues.
“It is purely as a result that in Wellington we are 10,000 to 15,000 houses short of where we need to be right now and given the fact our population is growing it is going to get worse.”
The listing has since been taken down.
For someone with a bit more cash to splash, a listing was offering one lucky buyer the chance to be neighbours with President Joe Bide in Wilmington, Delaware, coming with a price tag of $2.4million according to Realtor.com.
And a dingy terraced house took Twitter by storm when it was listed on Rightmove. The filth-strewn property – which went up for sale at £85,000 – was described as “a great investment opportunity” by estate agent Suttons.
Also, a first-time buyer found a £60,000 flat on Rightmove before he spotted two police officers outside the “cheap” one-bedroom home in Glasgow which left him thinking “something wasn’t right”.