How to Recover Your Full Security Deposit Without Falling for the Gratitude Trap
The most successful landlords aren’t the ones who keep your entire security deposit; they are the ones who keep exactly $235 of it.
Common wisdom suggests that property managers are predatory scavengers, waiting for you to leave a single nail hole in the drywall so they can swallow your $1,500 check whole. We are conditioned to expect a fight. We spend the final week of a lease in a state of high-alert paranoia, scrubbing baseboards with toothbrushes and wondering if that faint coffee ring on the granite will cost us our first-born child.
When the check finally arrives in the mail three weeks later, and it’s for $1,265 instead of $1,500, we don’t feel robbed. We feel victorious. We feel like we got away with something.
By returning the majority of your money, the landlord buys your silence and your satisfaction. They have solved the problem of your complaint before you even had the chance to voice it. You won’t call the housing board over $235. You won’t leave a scathing review on Yelp for a “mostly full” refund. You simply exhale, text your mother that you “got most of it back,” and go about your
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