The law states that the landlord must provide safe habitable premises it doesn t say anything about how old or what condition the carpeting can be.
Break lease carpet not replaced.
It s likely that the lease contains a no alterations clause that requires a landlord s written consent to make repairs or to replace the carpet.
Even if no damage to the rental property carpet has occurred age and normal wear eventually triggers the need for replacement.
The landlord must be given reasonable time to cure the defect.
Listed below are some facts you should know about carpet replacement.
About 6 weeks ago a pipe burst in my apartment.
Shortly before the lease ended the tenant wrote to the landlord to inform it that it would be replacing the tiled carpeting with strip carpeting of the same colour and specification.
If only a small portion of the home is affected then the problem may not be significant enough to break the lease.
This is a landlord tenant question.
For example if you want carpet replacement due to moldy carpets then the landlord would replace carpets because of the impact it could have on your health.
I am curious to know if the landlord will be required to replace the carpet or if it will be my responsibility.
If the carpet was there when you moved in you accepted its condition when you signed the lease.
Under california landlord tenant guidelines a carpet s useful life.
Hud s guidelines for normal wear and tear say that 5 years is the reasonable expectancy for carpeting.
After the lease ended the landlord claimed that the re carpeting breached the repair clause in the.
This is probably not enough to break your lease if the landlord can fix the problem expeditiously.
It is a 50 month lease.
That decision is not always out of their concern for your health though.
In addition to physical safety issues some carpets present a health risk to tenants if not replaced.
They replaced the carpet at a cost of 2600.
Many landlords charge tenants to pay for carpet replacement for no apparent reason.
But if the carpet is in good condition and just the wrong color stained or won t stay clean that s your problem not the landlord s.
However the carpet was soaking wet.
The landlord came out and fixed the pipe within a couple of days.
When the landlord did not object it went ahead and did so.
If your lease doesn t contain such a clause you may have more leeway to replace the carpet but on your own dime.
The reason i ask is because i thought that in a residential lease the landlord is required to replace the carpet after a certain amount of years and wondered if that applies to commercial properties.