Food stains urine stains and leaky fish tanks are never normal.
What is the normal wear and tear of carpet.
Carpet that is extremely stained from pets and spills.
Signs of normal wear and tear.
Carpet that is gently worn in high traffic areas or well worn in properties where the carpet is aging.
And the longer a tenant has lived in a place the more wear and tear can be expected.
Fading carpet due to age or exposure to sunlight.
Tear in carpet animal stains even if landlord knew you had a pet.
Chipped or gouged wood floors or excessive scraps from pet nails.
What does ordinary or normal wear and tear mean.
Dirty or faded lamp or window shades.
Carpet faded or worn thin from walking.
Generally ordinary or normal wear and tear is the unavoidable deterioration of a unit resulting from normal use by the tenant.
Holes stains or burns in carpet.
Typical damages in rentals beyond normal wear.
Normal wear and tear for a rental property includes.
Holes in wall holes from hanging pictures removal of decals on the walls.
Scuffed varnish on wood floors from regular use.
Read more on carpet damage.
Shoe markings in the halls and main walkways light stains which are expected over a period of a few years.
Fist marks and body prints.
Torn stained or missing lamp and window shades.
Typically landlords may use a tenant s security deposit for any cleaning or repairs necessary to restore the rental unit to its condition at the beginning of the tenancy landlords may not however use the deposit to cover the costs of ordinary wear and tear.
Burn marks iron cigar cigarette ground in stains.
For example a carpet worn thin due to normal traffic is ordinary wear and tear while a cigarette burn in the carpet is preventable negligence.
Landlords need to fix normal wear and tear but aren t required to fix tenant.
It s not caused by neglect or abuse of the property.
It typically results from a tenant living in the property and is considered normal depreciation.
A repair issue warranting a deduction is typically damage that was avoidable and negligent and not due to simply living in or using the property.