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The Landlord's Guide to Rental Property Maintenance

Maintenance doesn't have to eat your weekends. Here's how to handle repairs, build a vendor list, and prevent problems before they start.

Something will break. Not might — will. Toilets clog, AC units die in August, and water heaters pick the coldest week of the year to give up.

The question isn't whether you'll deal with maintenance. It's whether you'll handle it like a pro or scramble every time.

The 80/20 of Rental Maintenance

Here's a secret experienced landlords know: 80% of maintenance requests fall into a handful of categories:

  1. Plumbing — Clogged drains, running toilets, leaky faucets
  2. HVAC — AC not cooling, heater not heating, weird smells
  3. Appliances — Dishwasher, fridge, oven, washer/dryer issues
  4. Electrical — Outlets not working, tripping breakers, light fixtures
  5. Pest control — Ants, roaches, mice (depending on your area)

If you have a solution for each of these five, you can handle almost anything your tenant throws at you.

Build Your Vendor List (This Is Your Superpower)

You don't need to be handy. You need to know handy people.

Build this list before you need it:

| Problem | Who to Call | |---------|-----------| | General repairs | Handyman | | Plumbing | Licensed plumber | | Electrical | Licensed electrician | | HVAC | HVAC technician | | Appliances | Appliance repair service | | Pests | Pest control company | | Emergencies | 24/7 emergency plumber + electrician |

How to find good vendors:

  • Ask other landlords in your area (local REI meetups, Facebook groups)
  • Check Google reviews, but prioritize personal referrals
  • Try them on a small job first before trusting them with big ones
  • Get at least 2 quotes for any job over $500

Keep your list in your phone. When a tenant reports a leak at 10pm, you don't want to be Googling "plumber near me."

The Maintenance Request Process

Good process = less stress for everyone.

For tenants:

  1. Tenant submits a request (through your app, not a random text at midnight)
  2. They describe the issue and include photos
  3. They note the urgency: emergency vs. can wait

For you:

  1. Acknowledge within 24 hours (faster for emergencies)
  2. Assess: Can your handyman handle it, or do you need a specialist?
  3. Schedule the repair
  4. Follow up to confirm it's resolved

Emergency vs. non-emergency:

| Emergency (handle NOW) | Non-emergency (handle within 1–7 days) | |----------------------|--------------------------------------| | No heat in winter | Squeaky door | | Flooding / major leak | Minor drip | | No hot water | Cosmetic issues | | Gas smell | Appliance acting up (but functional) | | Broken lock / security issue | Slow drain | | Electrical hazard | Pest sighting |

Preventive Maintenance (The Cheapest Repairs)

The cheapest repair is the one you prevent. Set calendar reminders for:

Quarterly:

  • Replace HVAC filters ($5–15 per filter vs. $300+ HVAC repair)
  • Check for leaks under sinks
  • Test smoke and CO detectors

Twice a year:

  • Clean gutters (spring and fall)
  • Inspect caulking around tubs and windows
  • Service HVAC (spring for AC, fall for heating)
  • Check weather stripping on doors and windows

Annually:

  • Flush water heater (extends life by years)
  • Inspect roof for damage
  • Check exterior paint/siding
  • Snake main drain line as prevention
  • Professional pest inspection

This schedule costs maybe $500–1,000/year and prevents $3,000–$5,000 in emergency repairs. That's the best ROI in landlording.

How Much to Budget for Maintenance

Rule of thumb: 1–2% of property value per year.

  • $200K property = $2,000–$4,000/year
  • $300K property = $3,000–$6,000/year

Set aside this amount monthly:

  • $200K property = ~$200–$350/month into a maintenance reserve

Some years you'll spend almost nothing. Other years a water heater dies AND the roof needs patching. The reserve smooths it out.

Newer properties (built after 2000): Budget closer to 1%. Older properties (pre-1980): Budget closer to 2% or even higher. Old pipes, old wiring, old everything.

DIY vs. Hire It Out

DIY if:

  • You're genuinely handy (not YouTube-confident)
  • It's simple: replacing a faucet, fixing a running toilet, caulking
  • The property is nearby
  • You actually enjoy it

Hire it out if:

  • It involves plumbing beyond basics, electrical, HVAC, or structural work
  • It requires permits or licenses
  • You'd be Googling "how to" before starting
  • Your time is worth more than the repair cost

There's no shame in hiring everything out. Most successful landlords with 5+ units don't touch a wrench. They manage the process, not the pipe.

Handling Tenant Expectations

Set these expectations at lease signing:

  • How to submit requests — "Use the app, not a text to my personal phone at midnight"
  • Response time — "I'll acknowledge within 24 hours. Emergencies get immediate attention."
  • Access for repairs — "I'll give 24-hour notice before entering unless it's an emergency" (this is legally required in most states)
  • Tenant responsibilities — Changing light bulbs, replacing batteries in smoke detectors, basic drain maintenance, not being the reason the toilet is clogged

Put it in the lease. Reference it when needed.

Track Everything

For every maintenance event, record:

  • Date reported and date resolved
  • What the issue was
  • Who did the repair
  • How much it cost
  • Which property/unit

This is useful for taxes (repairs are deductible), for spotting patterns (if the same pipe leaks every year, it's time to replace it), and for justifying expenses if a tenant disputes a security deposit deduction.


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