Can a landlord charge you more for gas or electricity?

Can a landlord charge you more for gas or electricity?

Your landlord can’t charge you for gas or electricity if you pay your supplier directly. This is called the ‘maximum resale price’ – your landlord can’t charge you more than this.

How much does a landlord charge for water?

Landlord is charging us $7.00/1000 gal + $10″fee” + sewer on water bill, when the city’s rate is only $3.95/1000 gal for water, I called the city and they know he is doing this to all his tenants but say they can’t do anything about it. Does this fall under any law or regulation?

Is there a limit on the resale price of gas?

The Maximum Resale Price is the maximum that your landlord can charge you for gas and electricity which he has purchased from a supplier and sold on to you. It is set by the industry regulator, the Office of Gas and Markets. Anyone who buys gas or electricity from an authorised supplier and sells it on cannot recover more than they paid originally.

Can a landlord charge more than 100% to a tenant?

You MUST check to be sure of this first. Usually he cannot charge more to the tenants in total than the percentage used for direct tenant use. This means that a laundry area, lawns, clubhouse, pool and other common areas must be paid 100% by the landlord, not by the tenants.

Your landlord can’t charge you for gas or electricity if you pay your supplier directly. This is called the ‘maximum resale price’ – your landlord can’t charge you more than this.

Landlord is charging us $7.00/1000 gal + $10″fee” + sewer on water bill, when the city’s rate is only $3.95/1000 gal for water, I called the city and they know he is doing this to all his tenants but say they can’t do anything about it. Does this fall under any law or regulation?

You MUST check to be sure of this first. Usually he cannot charge more to the tenants in total than the percentage used for direct tenant use. This means that a laundry area, lawns, clubhouse, pool and other common areas must be paid 100% by the landlord, not by the tenants.

Can a landlord make a tenant pay for heating fuel?

Dad added a heating addendum to the lease and made acceptance mandatory. The tenants tried to fight back but in the end they could not do anything about it. Now, at night time, the thermostats were set to 60!