A friend of ours has two weeks to find a new place to rent. 5 out of 5 of the rentals they've applied to have demanded application fees in the hundreds of dollars, per adult applicant. This fee comes with no guarantee your application will be approved. There are dozens of people applying to a single apartment, all paying hundreds in application fees. A lot of them housing companies are straight-up ghosting the applicants after that payment comes in.

One of the locations told them they throw out evey application at the end of the month, even though they applied on the 26th. They held onto an application for 5 days, for $350, and then shredded it. The same company told them the rental was still available, but at a much higher rate now that it's May. In other words, they accepted dozens of $350 application fees for one unit and then gave it to nobody, keeping it on the market for another month for another round of application fees.

Do the math: Let's say a landlord charges $3000 a month to rent an apartment. But then they realize if they charge $300 to even APPLY to it, and 11+ people apply... that's more profitable than actually renting it out...

The new frontier for capitalism is Application Fees. Entire corporations propped up on owning empty houses that hundreds of people pay to apply to live in and then nobody is selected, repeat every month forever.

Our friend has lost over a thousand dollars in application fees alone at this point, and still has no place to live. She's the wealthiest millennial we know, she works in real estate, and she's turning into a Maoist right in front of us.

EXHIBIT B: https://hexbear.net/post/190647

    • MerryChristmas [any]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Luckily thus is pretty insignificant for me, but they tacked a $25 fee on our rent for garbage collection. I don't know about y'all, but I take my my own trash out when the bin needs emptying. I don't need or want someone popping by my apartment every Tuesday evening to take the bag to the dumpster.

      And the thing is, I know for a fact they didn't outsource the labor. They're just making the maintenance people do it on a rotation so it costs them basically nothing. Let's say we have 300 units on the property - that's $90,000 in annual fees that they have conjured up out of nowhere, and somehow I doubt that it is going to bonuses for the maintenance staff.