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by 1_1xdev1
854 days ago
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Legally prohibited? How? Rent stabilized units are a small percentage of the NYC rental market (and change tenants much less frequently than the rest of the market) Brokers seem to be able to capture the value just because they’re entrenched. Demand has outpaced supply, and landlords are happy to outsource the majority of the tenant search process. Large apartment buildings with leasing offices capture the value you’re saying can’t be captured. There are tons of comparable “no fee” apartment buildings with a rent that’s 15% higher. So — do you pay a 15% fee once, up front, and hope you don’t need to move? Or do you pay it on your rent? Edit: ok the percentage of rent stabilized units in NYC is actually a good bit higher than I thought. But my second assertion still stands — they practically never change over. So it feels like they’re an impossibly small part of the market. You won’t find rent stabilized deals advertised. |
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This is the part I simply cant fathom.
I am a landlord. Why would I ever be willing to fork over 10K to save a trivial amount of work. Do the brokers take on some sort of liability for tenants?