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LettingFocus

Unbiased buy to let, property investment and letting coaching, mentoring, advice and seminars for landlords from top selling property author and media commentator.

ID Fraud and how can I avoid becoming a victim? Special Tips for Landlords

Unfortunately, identity theft is a rapidly expanding area of criminality and landlords are a target. A bad tenant can easily steal a landlord’s identity. Also, there is a risk that you could let to someone who is actually using a false identity – someone who will probably pay no rent and be very hard to evict.
All the fraudster needs to do to take out loans or cards in someone else’s name is to get two utility bills. This is easy where personal mail is delivered to an address after the previous residents or the landlord has left. In fact, anyone is vulnerable to this kind of fraud if their post is left in communal areas.
Apart from using the post to get personal details, fraudsters also search bins or pick up information from street surveys or from the Internet.
In a recent extreme case a landlady rented out her own home to a tenant. She left some of her personal documents including title deeds to her house locked away in a room in the house. The tenant used these to impersonate her and tried to sell her property.

False ID
In this case, it also turned out that the tenant had actually used a false identity to pass a basic reference check to get into the property in the first place.
To avoid letting to someone using a false identity, ask each tenant to complete and sign a tenancy application form. This should contain a statement giving permission to carry out credit checks and seek references from employers and previous landlords. The more information collected on the form the better, because should the tenant abscond, it gives vital tracing information.

Tenant References
Check references carefully and call to verify them. Don’t assume the company they say they work for really exists. Anyone can mock up a convincing letterhead! Check with Companies House and on the web.
Ask to see recent utility bills, mobile phone bills and bank statements. Recent bank statements for that person’s current account will prove whether salary is being paid in and acts as an additional check on the employer’s reference.

Original Docs
Also insist on seeing an official original document proving the person’s identity. However, be aware that even official documents like passports can be fraudulent and how can you be sure that the person on that old passport is really the same one that stands in front of you?
Experienced landlords say one way around this is to ask to see the tenant’s last 4 months of bank statements because whilst the odd bank statement can go missing, it’s less likely that an ID fraudster can obtain 4 months of another person’s statements.
Never delegate referencing entirely to an agent. Check that they are doing proper reference checks for you because I know of many landlords who got their “tenant from hell” through a letting agent.
Make sure that your agent calls the person who gave the reference to check what was said because sometimes when you speak to the referee they are not as glowing about the tenant as they were in writing. If in doubt whether the agent did this; do it yourself anyway. A good honest prospective tenant won’t mind being checked out in this way.
In summary, if you use a robust referencing system, you will almost certainly avoid letting to ID fraudsters. They know that they can’t provide the documentation required and will seek a more gullible landlord elsewhere.
My top tips to Avoid Becoming a Victim of ID Fraud are as follows:
1. Check your bank and card statements carefully. Look out for transactions you don’t recognise. 2. Shred unwanted personal documents containing your name and address.
3. Don’t use obvious passwords, like your partner’s first name.
4. When moving, give utility suppliers, banks and the Council Tax people your new address and insist they send all post there. Tell your old tenants to do the same. Use the Royal Mail’s redirection service.
5. When looking for new tenants do a thorough reference check.
6. Anti fraud organisation CIFAS has more advice on how to avoid ID fraud. See http://www.cifas.org.uk/

ABOUT LETTINGFOCUS.COM and DAVID LAWRENSON
We are LettingFocus.com - the buy to let experts and I’m David Lawrenson, the author of “Successful Property Letting” - the UK’s top selling property and buy to let book for the last 3 years.
We help you make money in property by showing you and coaching you in the ways that work and which are of minimal risk to you.

Property clubs are property advice in the UK is still mainly unregulated and advice is often poor. As I am not linked to a property company, developer, estate agency or bridging loan provider I am able to give unbiased independent advice on where and what type of property to buy for investment, when to buy and how to buy property at a low price.
I can also explain how to reduce the risk of getting a bad tenant.

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Removing Squatters - Part One by Letting Focus

First things first, if your tenant decides not to leave when he should -say after the expiration of a section 21 notice - he’s not a squatter, he’s just a former tenant who won’t leave.
For tenants like this you’ll have to use normal court processes to get them out. You must not rely on your own “self help” measures. If it’s an eviction of an assured shorthold tenant following non-payment of rent or because they have not left at the end of the tenancy and after the appropriate correct notices have been served, you can follow the simple court procedures yourself without having to pay for the services of a solicitor.

Real Squatters
Real squatters are people who have no right to be in your property, either because your tenant has let them in (and they are not on the tenancy agreement and there has been no agreement by you to allow them to sub-let), or, they could be a third party who has simply let themselves in, while the property was left empty, unoccupied and unsecured.
In effect they are trespassers. (In fact there is no legal definition of squatter!)
I’ll look at what you can do to get rid of them in part two later of this blog post later this week.

MORE ABOUT LETTINGFOCUS

LettingFocus.com is the home of landlord information.

Hello, I’m David Lawrenson.
I have been a landlord and property investor myself for over 25 years and am author of “Successful Property Letting” – which has been the UK’s top selling property and buy to let book for the last 3 years.
At LettingFocus.com, we help landlords and property investors make money in property by coaching them in ways that work, which are ethical and which involve minimal risk to the investor.
We pride ourselves on giving independent unbiased buy to let advice on either a one to one mentoring / coaching basis or through our occasional group seminars.
Unfortunately, in the UK today, property advice in the UK is still largely unregulated and what counts as “good advice” is too often more about making the promoter money than giving useful information to the investor.
With no links to property firms, developers or bridging loan providers we can advise on where and what type of property to buy for investment and when to buy it. We also show you how to manage tenants properly.
At a corporate level, we also provide consultancy for banks, local authorities and social housing providers – helping them with their landlord facing or buy to let product strategies. We also write for property websites and are regularly quoted by the media.
We have written articles for numerous publications including The Independent, The Telegraph and quality landlord websites.

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For general info on our SEMINARS AND CONSULTING click here: Property Seminars, Networking Evenings and Consulting
TO READ CLIENT TESTIMONIALS – both commercial and private click here: Testimonials
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