Does a rented property require curtain rails?
Does a rented property require curtain rails?
Author
Discussion

SL

Original Poster:

868 posts

248 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
quotequote all
The initial message was deleted from this topic on 04 October 2011 at 21:32

SC7

1,882 posts

205 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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No

Trevelyan

729 posts

213 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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I wouldn't have thought so, but be prepared for the future tenants to wreck your walls putting some up. If it was my house I think I'd put something up before renting it out just to avoid the issue.

fido

18,595 posts

279 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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SL said:
legally required
Haha. Just waiting for curtain rails to be a feature of Ed Millipede's next speech, along with some catchy BS slogan.

Rach*

8,824 posts

240 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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When I moved into my current palace, not one room had curtain rails! The prev tenants had removed them and filled the holes.

What a PITA! I had none up until my folks came to visit after about a month, good old Dad

Wings

5,939 posts

239 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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As a landlord I believe it is good practice to offer a property to let, that contains the following fixtures kitchen and bathroom cabinets, toilet roll holders, towel rails, lampshades, curtain rails etc. etc.

Therefore I believe you are being unreasonable in not seeking a amicable settlement with your departed tenants, and why I strongly believe that should those tenants raise a Dispute through the TDS, over the monetary deduction from their bonded Deposit, then they will be successful.

anonymous-user

78 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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I'd rather fit the curtain poles myself than a tennant. They can be a pain in the backside to fit properly, I'd rather do it myself than let someone else loose to cause damage etc.& have the aggro of making good afterwards. Most tenants would expect such basics to in situ, as others say.

davidjpowell

18,626 posts

208 months

Tuesday 4th October 2011
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Wings said:
As a landlord I believe it is good practice to offer a property to let, that contains the following fixtures kitchen and bathroom cabinets, toilet roll holders, towel rails, lampshades, curtain rails etc. etc.

Therefore I believe you are being unreasonable in not seeking a amicable settlement with your departed tenants, and why I strongly believe that should those tenants raise a Dispute through the TDS, over the monetary deduction from their bonded Deposit, then they will be successful.
OP seems to have run for the hills...Wings - have you upset him!?

SL

Original Poster:

868 posts

248 months

Wednesday 5th October 2011
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davidjpowell said:
OP seems to have run for the hills...Wings - have you upset him!?
I'm a her, but thanks anyway.

I just can't be bothered to argue so I deleted my posts. If people really want to think I'd be as unreasonable and petty as to deduct from a deposit over a curtain rail feel free to go ahead and assume that's what the issue was and that's what I did.

Robb F

4,614 posts

195 months

Wednesday 5th October 2011
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wtf's gone on here then???

don't be a spoilsport, put the OP back up

Funk

27,402 posts

233 months

Wednesday 5th October 2011
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Robb F said:
wtf's gone on here then???

don't be a spoilsport, put the OP back up
I think this may go some way to explaining things:

SL said:
I'm a her...
hehe

davidjpowell

18,626 posts

208 months

Wednesday 5th October 2011
quotequote all
SL said:
I'm a her, but thanks anyway.

I just can't be bothered to argue so I deleted my posts. If people really want to think I'd be as unreasonable and petty as to deduct from a deposit over a curtain rail feel free to go ahead and assume that's what the issue was and that's what I did.
My pleasure...