For many Ugandans and retired workers, setting up rentals is the most immediate and assured source of passive income—set up your rental spaces, get tenants, and collect your due payments.
Being a successful landlord however requires more than just owning the property, but also some strategic planning and other tricks of the trade… so, what are some of the essential tips to ace landlordship?
1. Understand your obligations and responsibilities. As a landlord, know what your responsibilities are and what aren’t. Overstepping your jurisdiction will surely offend your tenants, cause tense relationships with them, and then lose them.
One way landlords overstep their power is when they assume they own the tenants for renting at their property, especially as the month ends and payment is due. Using abusive language, disclosing the debt to the neighborhood…all these break relationships with tenants, and serve as a cautionary tale to the new ones which affects business.
2. Screen your Tenants to Avoid Conflicts. People have different lifestyles, and some, often conflict with what the landlords want on their property. Loud noises, certain mannerisms, pets… to avoid quarrels and future conflicts, as the landlord you can implement simple tenant screening before admitting a tenant. It can be in the form of simple questions, or just a basic set of rules that you tell them beforehand—do you have pets? We don’t have pets here because of such reasons, do you drink? Keep it responsible, we don’t want disturbances and drunk scenes here…so that as the tenant moves in, they know what to do and what not to do.
3. Maintain Your Property. True, it’s the tenant’s responsibility to live in and use the rentals appropriately, but at the same time, it’s your responsibility as a landlord to make sure the property looks fresh and presentable. Regular maintenance not only preserves your property’s value but also keeps the tenants satisfied. That fresh layer of paint can mean a lot to the tenant, as they see that you actually care about the space. A clean and well-maintained property also attracts better-quality tenants, with the maintenance encouraging them to stay longer.
4. Set Competitive Rental Rates. There is no one-size-fits-all price when it comes to rentals, and the factors for this are just as diverse. Locations, intended use–to put it plainly, the same house in Kampala won’t go for the same renting price in Mukono or Kira. As the landlord, do some research on the local rental market to determine an appropriate renting price as this ensures you remain competitive while maximizing your monthly returns.
To set this, consider factors like the location, the amenities (toilets, washrooms, water, electricity), and the current demand of the rentals themselves.
In addition, try to maintain the prices, since frequent increments of renting prices without visible changes/improvements to the rentals themselves end up chasing long-standing tenants.
5. Build Positive Tenant Relationships. The truth of the matter is that we all like a peaceful place to stay, so when the relationship with your landlord is negative and challenging then your space isn’t very peaceful. As the landlord, building positive relationships with your tenants leads to longer tenancies and fewer disputes. So, be responsive to concerns and respect their privacy…a nosy landlord is hard to relate with.
At the end of the day, happy tenants are more likely to take care of the property and stay longer.
6. Stay organized and Keep Records. While the prospect of rental income with minimal input seems simple enough, one has to manage their finances, resolve disputes, and ensure compliance with obligations.
For this, maintain detailed records of all transactions, communications, and maintenance activities so that you can accord for all your expenses and returns from the rentals. Keeping records also ensures your tenants don’t have grounds for claiming to have cleared a certain month of living without actually paying for it… vigilance will save you a lot of trouble and quarrels.
7. Be prepared for challenges. despite best efforts, the truth is there will always be a difficult tenant or some damage to the property needing a fix. Some tenants might be extremely noisy, others rebellious and others just outright hard to work with, so be emotionally prepared and vested to handle all these characters.
8. Invest in security. Good security serves both the tenants’ and your needs as a landlord. To the tenants, it ensures that their person and property are safe, and to you the landlord, it ensures they keep true to their payments without running off in the middle of the night.
9. Consider professional help. Sometimes, it’s just too much, but don’t allow yourself to “die alone.” if managing the properties becomes overwhelming and taxing to you, consider hiring a property management company to handle screenings, maintenance, and even legal compliance…for a fee. This rental management, while taking a portion of the returns, allows you to focus on other aspects of your life and investments, especially for bigger properties like apartment blocks that house a lot of tenants.
While I can’t guarantee what outcomes to expect, implementing these strategies can at least boost your effectiveness as a landlord.