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2015 Fall Home Improvement and Garden LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.COM SEPT. 29, 2015 Page 27

redecorating or remodeling rights, it is always,

always, always a good idea to put your plans on

paper and go meet with your landlord or manager

and discuss what you have in mind. Remember,

you always want your landlord/manager on your

side rather than against you.

Most renters will find that there are usually more

options if you are renting a house rather than

renting an apartment. Apartments are generally

created to be homogeneous: all remain the same.

They are designed to be low maintenance and the

apartment leases usually severely or completely

restrict your remodeling/redecorating options. If

your apartment agreement forbids even painting,

check to see if you can hang pictures/textiles/rugs

on the walls to change coloring and create décor.

Overlay plain flooring with large area rugs.

Choose furniture and nick-nacks / brique-a-braq to

fill your rented apartment-home with personality,

color and texture. Just because you can’t make

permanent changes doesn’t mean you can’t make

it your own creation.

Renting a house usually allows for more options

in the area of decorating and remodeling. What

most landlords are going to be interested in is

who is paying for these changes and will these

changes restrict his/her ability to rent this place

after you move out. If the ideas are sound and

you are willing to spend your own money or

share the cost, often landlords will go along

with the improvements. Some landlords may

even encourage certain changes to interiors and

landscape of a rented house, so it is a good idea to

make a written plan and meet with your landlord.

If there are no allowance clauses or if there are

restrictions in your lease/contract that you wish

you could get around, it is a good idea to put

a solid explanation of your plan on paper and

schedule a talk with your landlord/manager.

And even if you don’t have a written contract or

lease, it is advisable to ask for permission before

proceeding. Explain what you want to do and

make a sound case for the changes, and perhaps

you can win over your landlord/manager and gain

permission.

If you are renting to own, you may still be under

restrictions regarding the changes you can make to

the property, even though one day it may be yours.

Until it is yours, it is owned by someone else. A

high percentage of rent-to-own and contract-buys

fail before they are completed and the property

reverts back to the original owner. So the owner

will often restrict what you can do with the

property until it is paid in full. Refer to your

purchase agreement and plan to talk to the owner

before you make changes.

Finally, it is often said that it is easier to ask for

forgiveness than it is to ask for permission, this is

the worst idea when you are a renter. Decorating/

remodeling without permission will often get

you booted out of your rented apartment or

house, and even if you get to keep your rented

home, you may have made an enemy of your

landlord/manager and forgiveness always comes

at a price. So, as a renter it is best to operate

under the Biblical principle of asking, seeking

and knocking, rather than pursuing your dreams

without permission.

In conclusion, although there are limitations

to your remodeling/redecorating options when

you don’t own your home, there are often things

you can do to make it your own home. Non-

permanent changes to the premises are always

an option when you overlay floors with area rugs

and decorate with furniture and nick-knacks.

Leases and rental agreements often spell out what

you may already have permission to do, and it is

always a good idea to get the landlord/manager/

owner on your side before you begin.

STORY BY

Jim Youngquist