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Talk about getting taken to the cleaners: Imagine you spot a great summer rental property advertised online. Looks wonderful. The deal sounds too good to be true, but the owner tells you (via e-mail or even phone) that the fee is correct. You apply for the rent and send in the required upfront payment.
Then you head down there for the first time to see an empty lot. It then dawns on you that the owner was really a crook who used some photo he found online and advertised it for rent. And if losing your money isn’t bad enough, the thief now has other private information on you like your Social Security number.
How can you protect yourself if the property is too far away to check out in person? Limit yourself to only local rental properties that you can actually physically check out first? Whether or not you can do that, here are safeguards:
Honest landlords can be scammed, too. They should search the information of responders to their ads to see what comes up.
This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.
Igor Kostyuchenok SVP of Engineering at Mbanq
28 May
Carlo R.W. De Meijer Owner and Economist at MIFSA
Alisa Zejnilovic B2B Marketing at Klika
27 May
Nkahiseng Ralepeli VP of Product: Digital Assets at Absa Bank, CIB.
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