Estate and mortgage

Are Electronic Rental Payments In Your Future?

Just as home owners have electronic mortgage payment options, renters can now choose to pay their rent electronically -- provided their landlord subscribes to one of the growing number of rent-payment services. Renters can opt to set up an automatic monthly deduction from a personal financial account, say a checking account or credit card or, for more flexibility, renters can tap an electronic rent payment service to pay the bill. Property managers and landlords who subscribe to automatic services that use the Federal Reserve"s a Automatic Clearinghouse (FedACH) system tap into the same system used to electronically move other money transfers such as company payrolls, accounts payable/receivable systems, insurance company premium payment systems, utility company payment programs and others. Justin Yang, vice president for ClearNow.com says the automatic monthly payment brand of electronic rent payments are not only federally protected but more convenient. "Automatic payments require a one-time setup on the part of the resident. The resident provides the property manager with information from a credit card or a checking account. Once setup, the resident is relieved of the chore of remembering to pay rent and the hassle of writing and delivering a check," Yang says. Yang says rather than an online sign up, residents of communities that use ClearNow.com register with the property manager or landlord. "We have found that this works better for tenants who are less comfortable using the Internet," said Yang. Automatic payments are also helpful for tenants who don"t want the hassle of writing a check every month, travel prone tenants who may be away on rent day, and tenants -- such as college students or older residents -- who have their rents paid by a third party. Tenants should be aware that if a credit card is used to pay the rent, interest charges apply to any unpaid credit card balances. As well, there must be sufficient credit or checking account funds available in the account each month at the time the payment is due to be withdrawn. If the funds aren"t available to pay the rent, the tenant could face late charges as well as failed payment penalties from ClearNow.com and other companies that provide the service. Checking accounts set up with over-draft protection could trigger yet another charge levied by the checking account bank for moving sufficient funds to cover the payment whenever funds aren"t available in the rent payment account. Renters don"t need to use rent-specific services like ClearNow.com and Tranzero.com to set up automatic monthly payments, but can use general bill payment services (PayPal, Yahoo Bill Pay, BillServ, etc.) to complete the same task. Also, rather than a preset automatic monthly rental payment service, some rent-specific and general online bill payment services provide a more flexible electronic payment alternative by leaving it up to the tenant when to pay the rent each month. Most general bill payment services and some rent-specific companies, including RentPayment.com and FlashRent.com offer both options, automatic monthly rental payments and month-by-month electronic payments. The flexibility, however, could come with an extra charge. Landlords typically foot the bill for automatic monthly payment services. The tenant may have to pay a service fee each time he or she uses the more flexible services. For more articles by Broderick Perkins, please press here.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
No News from the Seller? --- Not Necessarily Good News
Not long ago, an unassisted buyer asked me, “What"s the standard time frame for a seller to accept an offer?” It seems that when she made her offer more than a week earlier, she failed to specify how long the seller had to respond.
Popular Articles

Resources For Canadians Facing A Move
Statistics Canada reports that 4 in 10 Canadians picked up and moved between 1996 and 2001, but during our recent real estate boom, record home sales also mean escalated moving patterns. Even though Canadians are doing more of it, moving unfortunately continues to be an event that ranks along with death and divorce on the scale of all-time stressful events.

Is GRI Really Worth the Effort?
Question: As a comparative newcomer to the Realtor ranks, I"ve got a couple of questions about GRI. First, is it really worth the effort and the expense? I would have to travel to another city to participate. Second, if I do decide to attend, when is the best time in my career to do it? My broker is really enthusiastic about it, but I"m getting some mixed signals from the some of the old timers in the office.