What is a gross rental?

Hrubý lease is a lease or lease agreement in which the lessee pays a specific monthly or annual lease amount and has no obligation to pay any additional fees or maintenance fees and operation of the equipment. Depending on the type of property, this means that the lessee is not responsible for repairs of the structure of the building, the costs of landscaping, public services, insurance or real estate taxes. Responsibility for all these various fees remains with the owner of the property.

In many countries, gross rental is one of the most common types of borrowing agreements in the apartment. In exchange for the amount of monthly lease, the lessee has the use of the apartment, all appliances that are included in the unit, and basic tools such as water and waste water, natural gas and electricity. Depending on the rental conditions, the landlord may also provide other tools as part of the equipment, including the local telephone service and cable television.

The gross lease will also probably cover various general maintenance fees, such as the cost of mowing the lawn and engaging in other field tasks. The landlord's obligations are also likely to include providing tenants ongoing pest control, usually by creating a contract with a local extermination service. As with other civic equipment included in the lease conditions, the tenant is not charged for the maintenance of the lawn and the garden or for the periodic treatment of pests, which are managed by the extermination service.

with gross rental is not the lessee responsible for repairs of the structure. The landlord remains responsible for the replacement of appliances that stop working, repair broken windows, or deal with installation and connection problems. The lessee's responsibility is to report the problem of the landlord in time for the owner to evaluate the situation and take steps to resolve the matter as quickly as possible.

Maintenance of real estate insurance and paymentCH or property taxes also remain with the landlord under the conditions of gross lease. It is important to note that in most jurisdictions the landlord is only required to maintain insurance covered by buildings, land, cabling, plumbing and main appliances that are considered part of the assets. While some landlords decide to include a certain amount of coverage that protects their tenants from the loss of assets as a result of a situation in the disaster, this coverage is usually limited. For this reason, tenants should take steps to ensure insurance coverage of their own tenant, even if the lease agreement is structured as a gross rental.

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