• SeattleRain@lemmy.worldOPM
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          21 days ago

          To be fair I think they still allow you to pay online with a check, but having an online portal heavily implies you should pay with a credit card.

          I have heard some landlords don’t accept check, only debit card, but I don’t have proof.

          • i_dont_want_to@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            21 days ago

            My landlord would charge a convenience fee for an eCheck. The only way not to pay a convenience fee was to use auto pay.

            I refused to do that because I didn’t want to get them authorization to take whatever they wanted from my bank account. Yes, I know technically they can only charge the amount of my rent but I didn’t want to deal with any “mistakes” on their part… Especially considering the piss poor job they did fixing any other problem I encountered with their property.

    • PotentialProblem
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      21 days ago

      Yeah I’m surprised they allow the em to pay rent via credit card. Since that reduces the amount the landlord gets, it seems fair that it would charge a fee to cover that difference.

      I wonder if the fee goes away if a checking account is used.

      • TurtleTourParty@midwest.social
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        21 days ago

        I used to live in a condo and the management company charged a fee if I used ACH from a checking account but nothing if I mailed in a check. My bank would mail checks for free so I did that. It seemed much less convenient for them to have to open and cash all those checks but that wasn’t my problem.

        • WxFisch@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          I do this for our water company, it’s like $3 to pay it online via any method, but free for my bank to print a check and mail it to their office. I’m sure it costs more than that $3 to open the check, deposit it, and credit my account for it.

        • sfbing@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          I still do this for places that charge fees for credit cards. My credit union calls it “Bill Pay”. It is free so long as I do some small number of transactions per month – I think four.

      • ysjet@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        My man, the amount the landlord is charging rent is entirely arbitrary outside of being ‘as high as they can get away with’. Don’t make excuses for a landlord swindling you out of your money by making that amount seem more palatable by shuffling bits of it behind “fees.”

        Almost $1700 a month in base rent, the landlord can pay the damn fee for their own convenience in not having to cash a check.

        • PotentialProblem
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          20 days ago

          While I agree on rent being too damn high, I think I draw the line as follows.

          If you agreed to pay X and there are mandatory fees on top of that, that’s bullshit that should be illegal.

          If you agreed to pay X and you want to use a method of payment that will make the other party receive less than X… that’s on you.

          It feels a lot like… if someone agrees to pay me X and decides to pay me less than X… that’s some bullshit.