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How do I remove myself from being a guarantor from someones shorthold tenancy agreement?
They have a 6 month rental agreement and have failed the first 2 payments. They then received help from someone else to pay the rent. At what point could I remove myself as the gaurantor, as I find the stress unbearable and it is only a matter of time before payments default again.
No lectures please. It was for my manipulative, alcoholic daughter who promised everything would be ok this time.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well i dont know about anyone else but i know something similar happened to me.
Did u sign anything to say u will definately go guarentor for the full 6 month period or did u just agree to be a guarentor. If u havent signed for any set period of time then if u notify the landlord in writing that u no longer wish to be guarentor for the said property/person then u are only liable for it up until the date that u give in writing. From then on its up to the Landlord to either carry on with the tennant by allowing the tennant to find another guarantor or allow them to live there without one, or evict them. Either way its your daughters problem then as she was the one who signed for the property and if her guarentor backs out then she loses her right to live there!
You are liable up until the point of notifying the appropiate person of your termination of it so if there are rents owed up to the point u write to the landlord then u may still have to pay them but as from the agreed date of termination its not your concern. Make sure u do it in writing tho! Verbal agreements arent always considered legal.
Let me point out that as guarentor your not liable for the property, the person that is renting it is! Your only liable for paying if they dont pay and if its not in your name on the rental agreement and no contract stating how long your guarentor for you can cancel the agreement to be guarentor at any point. The only person that will suffer from u canceling is your daughter and not yourself.
Best to contact the Citizens Advise and then the landlord directly through writing and explain your actions. The quicker u do it the better before more debts rack up
further to my previous post, if you were given a contract to sign to guarentee that u would be guarentor for the full 6 month rental agreement then i am afraid that u are liable for them 6 months but i would advise writing to the landlord explaing that at the end of the signed agreement u wish to no longer be guarentor. This means that she has missed the first 2 payments that u have said have been paid for by someone else, so means u will be liable for a further 4 months of payments until u are no longer guarentor so still write to them as quick as possible terminating the contract from the earliest agreed date (6 months) and have enough money put aside to pay for 4 months remianing just in case your daughter does drop u in it with the rent.
Next thing to save up 4 months worth of the rent in a year or so's time and take it out of the bank in �10 notes. Stack it up into a nice big pile and take a picture of it so that u have a worthy reminder to look at how much your daughter costs u whenever she asks for a favour. The actual sight of the money might stop her pulling your heart strings in times of need!