Yes, if he can demonstrate that you are too irresponsible to have a pet and in his opinion you might damage the home from having a pet. Other factors may include the species of pet you want vs. what everyone else has. For example you may not have a snake or monkey when everyone else has a dog or cat.
Ask the landlord if you can get pet because a neighbor got pets, and hold a good argument.
Yes and you should let your pet mouse go into the kitchen for a walk. The landlord would like that.
I'm no lawyer but... If a landlord may charge a pet deposit at all, then surely they can change it for an animal in a tank.
No law requires everyone to have any particular animal as a pet, let alone any kind of scorpion
If it's prohibited to have pets, read the exact rule and look for loop-holes before you try to start convincing your Landlord of anything.If you've looked through it up, down, backwards, forwards and found no loop-holes, I suggest you make up or find an exceptionally good reason for having that pet hamster.I've heard things like "scientific experiment to test if a pet can live as long as humans..."If your Landlord's a stubborn fella, you could always hide it? No?Tell him how much you value the rules, but that you're feeling a bit depressed, and start babbling about childhood issues and your parents flushing your pet fish...Just kidding.The important part is to find that "click" reason that convinces your Landlord that he shouldn't let you, but that it is important to bend the rules just this one time.It's very hard to convince a Landlord (sleezeballs) to let you keep a pet, but making him realize that the hamster is so important to you, you would die without it could work.It's all about knowing exactly what to say!
Ask the landlord (owner of the house) nicely ;-)
If you have a pet and have lived in an residence for four years, the landlord may be entitled to a pet deposit. Your residence is not permanent: you are a tenant, and your pet can cause damage, because it's an animal. One day, when you move out, the landlord needs to prepare the residence for a new tenant. Your landlord may be a little tardy in asking for a deposit. You may be able to negotiate the deposit if you bring your landlord into your residence and show that after four years, there is no pet damage. Your landlord may counter that your pet could damage the residence in the future, and the landlord would be correct. Finally, when you do move out, at least your landlord may want to remove trace evidence of a pet having lived in the residence, including dander, pet hair, aquarium damage, and so forth. Your pet deposit would cover this expense.
A pet is any animal which is not a service animal.
If a landlord has an objection to a tenant and wishes to evict that tenant then yes, he does have to inform the tenant in question about the objection. Tenants must be given an opportunity to remedy the problem rather than being evicted.
Companies that offer "buy to let" landlord insurance include Direct Line, Quote Zone, and Click4Quote. Others include Instasure, Simple Landlord, and Endsleigh.
Yes, they can.
First not everyone has a pet but the most common pet would be either a cat,dog or even a fish or gerbil