Testimonials
"Just a quick thanks for assisting in getting my property let. You very kindly put my [flat] as the featured property and following a contact through your message board yesterday, the flat has now been let. All in all, a total of about a week!
As always, helpful and stress free!"
Alex Round, London
"RentFair has certainly helped us let our property. We received about 5 to 10 serious enquiries per day and in fact let it to the first tenants we showed around ..."
Tom Ward, London
1. Wide Coverage
Put your Property on RentFair and it will also be advertised on major property sites* used by estate agents such as Fish4Homes, Zoomf and Nestoria. These sites receive millions of visitors each month and are either not accessible to individual private landlords or charge in excess of £20 to place a single ad if you go to them direct.
2. Cost Effective
With RentFair you can get all this exposure for your property for just £5. And, unless you choose to remove it, your ad stays on our site for a full 6 weeks.
3. Tenancy Agreements, Credit Checks
If you want us to prepare a tenancy agreement or run credit checks on your potential tenants, we can handle that too. And for a tiny fraction of the cost of a high street letting agent.
4. Tenants already waiting
What's more, within seconds of adding your property to our listings, it will be emailed to all our tenant members who have requested email alerts for properties like yours. So you could literally let your property within hours of advertising with us.
5. Money back Guarantee
Still not convinced? Try us. If you don't receive at least 3 serious enquiries within the 6 weeks, contact us and we'll refund your £5 listing fee.
* room ads are not listed on partner sites
From 6 April 2007 all deposits taken by landlords for assured shorthold tenancies in England and Wales must be protected by a tenancy deposit scheme. Any deposit paid before this date will not need to be protected by a tenancy deposit scheme. Landlords will have to safeguard the deposit within 14 days of receiving it.
Landlords can choose to protect the deposit either through a “custodial scheme” or through an insurance-based scheme. The custodial scheme is free but involves the landlord paying the deposit into the scheme for the duration of the tenancy. Under the insurance scheme, landlords retain the deposit but have to pay a premium to the insurer. The premium can not be passed on directly to the tenant.
Visit www.depositprotection.com for details of the custodial scheme and www.mydeposits.co.uk for details of the insurance scheme run by the National Landlords Association.