Tenant
A comprehensive AI agent skill for renters navigating the full lifecycle of renting. Helps you evaluate apartments, understand lease terms before signing, do...
Description
name: Tenant description: A comprehensive AI agent skill for renters navigating the full lifecycle of renting. Helps you evaluate apartments, understand lease terms before signing, document your unit at move-in, know your rights when things go wrong, communicate with landlords effectively, handle security deposit disputes, and plan your move-out to protect every dollar of your deposit.
Tenant
The Lease You Signed Without Reading
Almost nobody reads their lease before signing it. Not completely. Not carefully. Not with the understanding that every clause in that document is a binding legal commitment that will govern where you live, how much you pay, and what recourse you have when something goes wrong — for the next twelve months at minimum.
This is not carelessness. A standard residential lease is twelve to twenty pages of dense legal language, written by attorneys representing the landlord's interests, handed to you at the end of a viewing when you are excited about the apartment and anxious about losing it to another applicant. The implicit social pressure is to sign quickly and ask few questions.
The tenant who reads carefully, asks questions, and understands what they are agreeing to before they sign is not being difficult. They are being rational. This skill helps you be that tenant.
Evaluating a Place Before You Commit
The viewing is a performance. The landlord or agent shows you the best version of the unit — cleaned, lit well, presented at its most appealing. Your job during a viewing is not to admire the apartment but to investigate it.
The skill generates a complete viewing checklist for any apartment you are considering. Water pressure in every tap and the shower. Hot water temperature and how long it takes to arrive. Every window opened and closed to check for sticking, gaps, and drafts. Every door tested for alignment. Every outlet tested. Signs of moisture, mold, or previous water damage on ceilings, walls, and under sinks. The condition of appliances. The quality of natural light at the time of day you would actually be home. Noise levels from neighbors, street, and building systems.
It also covers the questions worth asking before you fall in love with a place: why the previous tenant left, how long the unit has been vacant, what utilities are included, how maintenance requests are handled and how quickly, whether the building has had pest issues, what the policy is on lease renewal and rent increases.
The answers to these questions are as important as anything you can see during the viewing.
Understanding Your Lease
A lease is a contract. Every clause in it means something, and some of them mean things that will surprise you when you encounter them under pressure.
The skill reviews any lease and translates it into plain language. It flags the clauses that most commonly cause problems for tenants: automatic renewal provisions that lock you in if you do not provide written notice by a specific date, maintenance responsibility clauses that shift obligations typically belonging to the landlord onto the tenant, restrictions on guests that are broader than most people expect, noise and quiet hours policies and their enforcement mechanisms, subletting and assignment restrictions, early termination fees and their calculation method, and the exact conditions under which the landlord may enter the unit.
It identifies clauses that may be unenforceable in your jurisdiction — because landlords sometimes include terms that sound authoritative but have no legal standing — and flags anything that warrants a direct conversation before you sign.
Move-In Documentation
The security deposit dispute begins at move-in, not at move-out. What you document on day one is your evidence on the last day.
The skill guides you through a systematic move-in inspection. Every room, every surface, every fixture, every appliance. It tells you what to photograph, how to photograph it to be useful as evidence, and how to describe conditions in writing so that pre-existing damage is clearly recorded with a date stamp.
It helps you complete or supplement any move-in checklist provided by the landlord, and advises on sending a written summary to the landlord within the first few days — creating a documented record that both parties have acknowledged the condition of the unit at the start of the tenancy.
When Things Go Wrong
Maintenance issues, noise complaints, landlord entry without notice, lease violations on either side — tenancy generates conflict with predictable regularity. How you handle these moments determines whether they remain minor inconveniences or escalate into significant problems.
The skill helps you navigate every common tenant situation. How to submit a maintenance request in a way that creates a paper trail if the issue goes unaddressed. How to follow up when requests are ignored and at what point non-response becomes a legal issue. What your rights are regarding habitability — the conditions a landlord is legally required to maintain — and what remedies are available when those standards are not met. How to document a landlord's entry without proper notice. How to respond to a rent increase notice. How to handle a neighbor dispute through proper channels.
Every communication the skill helps you draft is professional, specific, and designed to move toward resolution while preserving your legal position if resolution does not come.
Protecting Your Security Deposit
Security deposit disputes are the single most common source of conflict between tenants and landlords. They are also largely preventable with the right preparation.
The skill helps you understand exactly what a landlord can and cannot deduct from a security deposit in your jurisdiction — because normal wear and tear is almost universally non-deductible, and landlords frequently charge for it anyway. It helps you document the condition of the unit at move-out with the same rigor as move-in. It tells you what cleaning and repair standards you are actually responsible for meeting and which alleged deficiencies are the landlord's cost to bear.
If a landlord withholds part or all of your deposit without proper justification, the skill helps you respond: the written dispute letter, the legal standards for deposit return timelines in your jurisdiction, and the remedies available when landlords violate them — which in many places include penalties significantly exceeding the original deposit amount.
The Move-Out Process
Leaving well protects you financially and legally. The skill builds a complete move-out timeline working backward from your last day: when to give formal written notice and in exactly what form, what cleaning standards to meet, what repairs to make and which to leave, how to schedule and document the move-out walkthrough, how to handle key return, and how to follow up to ensure your forwarding address is on file for deposit return.
It drafts your formal notice to vacate in whatever format your lease requires, ensures the notice period is calculated correctly, and creates a checklist of every step between notice and departure so nothing is forgotten under the pressure of a move.
A Note on Legal Advice
Tenant-landlord law is highly jurisdiction-specific. Rights and remedies that apply in one city or state may not apply in another. This skill provides general guidance and preparation support. For serious disputes involving significant money, habitability issues, or potential eviction, consult a tenant rights organization or licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.
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