Your rental listing is live online, the rent price has been set, and viewing applications are coming in. Before creating any tenancy agreements you need to decide on how you will be collecting rent.
In places like New Zealand, Australia and the UK most people use bank transfers for collecting rent, however, there are several other options available.
If you’re a first-time landlord, we have some helpful tips for you to get started. If you’re an experienced landlord, we will be covering some new tech in rent collection that will help you streamline your processes and make your life much easier.
There are some rules when it comes to collecting rent that all landlords should be aware of. We summarise these below but you can also check Tenancy Services for more information.
Once you know what your obligations are for collecting and tracking rent, you can start asking other questions that will help inform your decision on how you will actually do these things. Below are some questions that we think will help you make the best decision for both you and your tenants.
Keeping these questions, and your obligations in mind, we’re going to review four different methods of collecting rent. At the same time we will look at the pros and cons so that you can make a decision on which method is right for you.
Along with being time-consuming, cash is the riskiest method of collecting rent. Meeting a tenant at a regular time and place and collecting a large amount of cash is not a safe thing to do. By doing this, you’re making both yourself and the tenant a target for robbery.
If you are collecting rent in cash, you need to be providing a written receipt to your tenant immediately. What’s more, keeping paper records of rent is running the risk of these being lost or damaged. Having an excel spreadsheet to track rent payments alongside physical receipts is probably best. This way you also have a digital copy should you misplace or damage the paper one.
If cash is your payment method, you will also want to have a plan in place for what you will actually do with it. Will you bank it weekly? And if the answer is yes, will you be able to physically get the rent each week and go to your bank to deposit it? All of these are things to consider.
Before the days of Eftpos, online banking and Apple Pay, the humble cheque book was a staple in everyone’s handbag.
Today, cheques are still very popular with older age groups who are not as comfortable using new technology. People who use this method to collect rent often don’t view online payments as secure and don’t trust them. Additionally, there may be other barriers to them using technology such as not having access to a computer or smartphone.
It is important to consider accommodating people who will prefer to pay via cheque, as they could be excellent tenants. However, you also need to be comfortable with the process of receiving rent through cheques and trust that tenants will be able to deposit these weekly.
Cheques are becoming far less common as a form of paying bills and collecting rent. As a result, some New Zealand Banks are phasing them out. Kiwibank are going cheque-free from the 28th of February this year.
Automatic payments are a way that your tenants can pay rent online. They are easy to set up through online banking on a computer, or through a banking app on a smartphone. They are similar to direct debits in that the money will automatically be paid to the landlord from the tenant’s account each week, however, automatic payments and direct debits still have their differences. Let’s clarify…
An automatic payment is an instruction that a tenant has given to their bank to make a regular payment of a fixed amount. This can be either for a fixed period of time or indefinitely. Additionally, the tenant has the ability to change the payment amount, date or frequency at any time. This is great as tenants don’t need to remember to pay rent as it will do so automatically and where mistakes might occur in the rent amount or day of payment changes can easily be made.
On the other hand, a direct debit is a regular payment that is approved by an individual but set up and controlled by a business. The business needs to have a direct debit authority form signed by the individual. Using this method, the individual cannot change payment details without notifying the business first and them agreeing to the changes. For this reason, it is unethical to do your rent collection through direct debits.
Some things you need to be considering if you are collecting rent online:
Now that we’ve looked at more traditional ways to collect rent, let’s see what other options exist and that have been created for this purpose.
Much of what used to be a manual process is now being automated. It’s not so long ago that you needed to remember spare change for parking machines while spending a week waiting for a bank cheque to clear from your holiday job. This is the same for the way we collect rent as new automated options are available and are responding to a huge issue in the renting industry: arrears.
Rent arrears are currently making up 20,000 tenancy tribunal orders a year. This has led to tighter insurance obligations around rent records and it has also encouraged a surge of automated rent collection tools that make collecting and tracking rent easy.
How does this work? Well, automated rent collection collects the rent, reconciles payments and receipts your tenant. In addition, you’ll get a notification when the payment is received and on its way to your account.
New Zealand has two services that do this, one is Grove and the other is myRent.
Grove is a new standalone product aimed at self-managing landlords. You can track rent for single or multiple properties.
In contrast, myRent rent tracking is part of a full series of products. Rent tracking is a set cost per month, but you need to have an account with them first.
Both Grove and myRent have different features and processes that make collecting and tracking rent easier for landlords. We compare them below so you can decide which one best suits you.
*Currently Grove is in a testing phase, so it is free to use.
Now that you’re well informed on the pros and cons of different methods of collecting rent.
Firstly you need to consider how you will be receiving the money, and how you will be keeping track of payments. Next, decide how involved you want to be with the process of reconciling payments. Lastly, make sure that your method of rent collection is meeting your landlord insurance obligations and your responsibilities as a landlord.
As a result, choosing a method that suits both you and your tenants will be a piece of cake.
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