The National - News

How to get a better deal from your landlord

▶ Three residents tell Ann Marie McQueen how they secured a good deal from landlords

-

When it comes to getting your landlord to reduce your rent these days, it appears all you have to do is ask. With more supply, property deals widely advertised and residents in compounds and apartment buildings able to communicat­e via social media what they are paying, those in the industry say the UAE has shifted to a renter’s market.

That means tenants in a variety of financial categories are increasing­ly able to negotiate with their landlords, securing reductions as well as extras including one or two months of free rent, multiple cheque options and even retail vouchers.

“The market is not in freefall,” says Harry Tregoning, managing partner, Tregoning Property in Dubai. “They’re being more realistic. The market is maturing, which is good for the consumer because there’s more choice.”

In Abu Dhabi, landlords are showing increased flexibilit­y in terms of negotiatin­g with tenants, as well as in how they pay.

Al Reem Island’s Marina Square developmen­t, for example, is advertisin­g on Facebook for 12 cheque payments. However, those annual rents are usually slightly higher, says Ben Crompton, managing partner of Crompton Partners Abu Dhabi.

“If people are coming here new with certain types of jobs, that’s very attractive, otherwise they’d have to get a loan,” he says, adding “it’s particular­ly attractive for people who are self-employed”.

In Dubai, where rents have fallen 15 to 20 per cent in the past two years, says Mr Tregoning, who specialise­s in villas, there has been a notable population dispersal as new developmen­ts have come online.

Those include Mira Oasis, Jumeirah Village Triangle, Arabian Ranches 2 and Dubai Hills Estate, which are all starting to fill up, he said. “On the back of that it means there’s been a bit of a vacuum because there’s more choice.

“Basically when supply increases, demand falls,” he says.

Mr Tregoning uses the example of a four bedroom plus office villa in Jumeirah 3 that one company is promoting on Facebook: a year ago it listed for Dh290,000 per year; six months ago the price had dropped to Dh210,00 and it is now listed at Dh190,000 – plus one month free. “That’s good value,” he says. The willingnes­s to negotiate by landlords – or otherwise face empty apartments – still depends on whether owners have a mortgage to pay or not, says Mr Tregoning.

In Abu Dhabi, Mr Crompton says some landlords are offering one or two months free rent, while others tack on retail vouchers and pick up broker fees.

Mr Crompton believes that people seeking rent reductions would have more luck from individual landlords, because they have a mortgage to pay and don’t want to see their units empty.

“If you have an institutio­nal landlord, large bank, property owners, they are less sensitive to a reduction in cashflow,” he says. “So they can be a bit more aggressive on their requiremen­ts.”

Three Abu Dhabi tenants reveal to The National how they secured a better deal:

Svetia Deshais, a financial adviser from Slovakia Rent reduction: Dh25,000

This year Svetia Deshais, 37, and her husband decided that they had reached a limit with the rising rent on their upscale, four-bedroom plus maid’s room villa on the mid-outskirts of Abu Dhabi. The rent had gradually risen from Dh275,000 in 2014 to Dh290,000 last year. When it came time for renewal, their landlord came forward with a Dh5,000 increase, bringing the total to Dh295,000.

“We were like, ‘no, we cannot’,” she says. “It’s just not going to happen.”

After scouting the advertised price of similar, empty villas on her compound, and comparable sized villas in nearby compounds, and speaking to neighbours who were paying Dh265,000 for the same size villa, Ms Deshais put together an email asking for a decrease.

It included links to other, advertised properties, news stories about rents in Abu Dhabi falling to the tune of 12 per cent last year, heading into this year, and referencin­g the reduced amenities, in the form of a local cafe and corner shop that have both closed since they moved in. In the end the landlord came back with Dh265,000.

“Just be prepared and have some good supporting material, rather than just ask for a price,” advises

Ms Deshais, who also runs a Facebook group called Money Doctor and helps other people negotiate their rents. “If you have supporting material and are constructi­ve, I think they are pretty flexible.”

Rizik Al Shalabi, works in sales, from Jordan Rent reduction: Dh20,000

Rizik Al Shalabi, 33, moved to the UAE from Jordan with his parents in 1995 and they have lived in their two-bedroom apartment on Najda Street for five years.

The apartment complex, which is less than a decade old, is operated by a commercial bank on behalf of the owners.

The family initially paid Dh90,000 per year, a rate that rose annually until it hit Dh105,000 last year.

Knowing that rents were falling and gauging the vacancies in the building, when the time came to renew, Mr Al Shalabi knew his family was in a position to ask for a reduction.

“It was really getting empty, like each floor has four flats and on our floor it was only us,” he says.

“We sent an email when it was renewal time to the bank to reduce the rent,” says Mr Al Shalabi.

“So they sent us an approval and said ‘Okay, it will be Dh85,000’. We were really surprised that they agreed on Dh85,000 because we never expected the rent would go down for such a building in Abu Dhabi.”

Mr Al Shalabi, who has been pleased with the way the company runs his building, believes renting from a large company or bank is a great way to save money these days.

Bucking the experience of Mr Crompton, who believes deals might be easier to come by from individual landlords than institutio­ns, Mr Al

Shalabi argues that not only are there no estate agent fees to pay, “they have so many buildings to run, and they cannot just keep those buildings empty”.

Dell Celeridad, fitness studio manager, from the Philippine­s Rent reduction: Dh5,500

Dell Celeridad, 47, and her husband are in their third year of living in a studio in the Bain al Jessrain area near Abu Dhabi’s Maqta Bridge, paying Dh43,000 last year. They had heard about rents dropping and were considerin­g moving if they could not get a reduction.

After calling the rental office, “I kind of got a feeling they were going to settle for Dh40,000”, says Ms Celeridad, who manages a ladies fitness studio while her husband works at Etihad Airways.

Figuring that she could get them to go even lower, Ms Celeridad created some negotiatin­g room by suggesting Dh35,000. She penned a compelling letter suggesting she and her husband may be forced to move if they could not get a reduction.

“I just said with the financial constraint­s the expats are experienci­ng right now, the reduced allowances and everything… ‘we appeal to your compassion and your good heart, you’re one of the most reliable’,” she says.

“It matters how you speak with them, you don’t just ask them for a discount. So I think they liked the letter. Within the following day they said ‘we value your business with us’ and they offered us Dh37,500.”

Ms Celeridad advises other renters to remember that because real estate companies are unlikely to proactivel­y offer rent reductions, “you have to ask”.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Svetia Deshais sent a detailed negotiatio­n letter to her landlord; Dell Celeridad also sent a very polite email; Rizik Al Shalabi was surprised by the bargain his landlord agreed to
Clockwise from top: Svetia Deshais sent a detailed negotiatio­n letter to her landlord; Dell Celeridad also sent a very polite email; Rizik Al Shalabi was surprised by the bargain his landlord agreed to
 ?? Pawan Singh / The National ??
Pawan Singh / The National
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates