I know if I rented, that is what I would do, if I thought the landlord was going to rip me off and keep my deposit.

However long your contract is for, surely there will always be a 'period of notice'? Usually 2 -3 months.Super Joe wrote: Many (all !?) of these rental contracts are not longer than 3 years so not registered at land office. Many have clauses in that say if the landlord wishes to sell at anytime then the tenant has 1 month's notice to vacate.
So many do not really have a 3 year rental contract but potentially a 1 month oneSJ
If you have 2-3 months, either side, that would seem fair'ish. Many contracts I've reviewed state 1 month, even for businesses, ie: Farangs here 'lease' (it's not a real registered lease) a business premise, spend 500k fitting it out and are on just 1, or even 2-3 months notice and they don't even know.dtaai-maai wrote:However long your contract is for, surely there will always be a 'period of notice'? Usually 2 -3 months.
MrPlumMrPlum wrote:I recently moved and there was no sign of the deposit (10,000 thb, which I insisted on) being returned. I chafed about it and went to see the landlord. Despite taking great care in the house there were inevitably some things that needed repair. Turns out the deposit wasn't enough to cover the repairs. (It had high quality furnishings). My irritation evaporated, to be replaced by embarrassment and I offered to make up the difference. They refused.
Good landlord.
If you refuse to pay the rent... the last 2 months... can't they turf you out there and then? Aren't you in breech of your rental agreement and then wouldn't you guarantee the landlord would keep the deposit?
Indeed, they can be a bit rrrrruff...jimbeam1 wrote: As I don't want any doggy dealings.