Stephen991
Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
FLORIDA
Prior walkthrough of unit revealed it was generally clean. Upon move-in, I found urine on toilet seats, body & head hair in drains, mildew in shower, and a glob of ratted-up hair in the dirty kitchen sink. Bed linens were unwashed and smelled of body odor. A request was made to the Landlord's agent to have the unit properly cleaned. She refused, saying it was cleaned. We requested name and # of cleaning service and she admitted the owner had cleaned it himself. I insisted she pay for a proper cleaning.
Fast forward to the end of the lease. Agent tells me that since she "had to pay for two cleanings" (nonsense), I am now obligated to pay for a professional cleaning of the unit, prior to move-out. The contract has absolutely no such vacancy cleaning clause whatsoever. She requested proof of professional cleaning, or she "would contact her attorney" and take the money from my security deposit.
Question: Is the landlord's real estate agent allowed to require the tenant pay for a professional cleaning upon vacancy, in the complete absence of any such vacancy clauses in the contract? Is the landlord's agent allowed to keep a portion of the security deposit to pay for such a cleaning, in absence of any such clauses in the contract?
Thanks.
-S-
FLORIDA
Prior walkthrough of unit revealed it was generally clean. Upon move-in, I found urine on toilet seats, body & head hair in drains, mildew in shower, and a glob of ratted-up hair in the dirty kitchen sink. Bed linens were unwashed and smelled of body odor. A request was made to the Landlord's agent to have the unit properly cleaned. She refused, saying it was cleaned. We requested name and # of cleaning service and she admitted the owner had cleaned it himself. I insisted she pay for a proper cleaning.
Fast forward to the end of the lease. Agent tells me that since she "had to pay for two cleanings" (nonsense), I am now obligated to pay for a professional cleaning of the unit, prior to move-out. The contract has absolutely no such vacancy cleaning clause whatsoever. She requested proof of professional cleaning, or she "would contact her attorney" and take the money from my security deposit.
Question: Is the landlord's real estate agent allowed to require the tenant pay for a professional cleaning upon vacancy, in the complete absence of any such vacancy clauses in the contract? Is the landlord's agent allowed to keep a portion of the security deposit to pay for such a cleaning, in absence of any such clauses in the contract?
Thanks.
-S-
Last edited: