My roommate left with the security deposit and I'm still paying for it
Met her on Facebook Marketplace. She seemed fine. Moved in March, disappeared in June, took the $1,200 deposit check I'd given her to forward to the landlord. Turns out she never paid it. Found this out when I got an eviction notice.
Dodged a bullet, toured this place and found 3 red flags in 10 minutes
Toured a 1BR in South End last week. Lights flickered when we turned on the AC, there was a patch of ceiling that looked suspiciously textured in a corner, and the landlord got weirdly defensive when I asked about the previous tenant's move-out. Noped out of there.
Day 1: Seemed normal. Day 14: Filled the entire fridge with unlabeled jars. Day 30: Started leaving passive-aggressive notes about 'vibes.' Day 45: Invited her entire family for an 'extended visit.' Day 67: Lease was up. I left. No forwarding address.
They charged me $1,900 in move-out fees. My apartment was spotless.
I steam cleaned, patched holes, had it professionally cleaned. Got the move-out report, $400 for 'wall scuffs,' $350 for 'carpet beyond normal wear,' $600 for 'cleaning,' and $550 for 'broken blinds' (I have photos proving otherwise). This is how it starts.
Drop your neighborhood, rent, and whether you think it's worth it
Let's get a real picture of what people are actually paying in Charlotte right now. I'll start: South End, $1,875 for a 1BR, concessions gone at renewal, up 12% from last year. Not worth it anymore.
7 red flags I now look for every single apartment tour (learned the hard way)
1. They won't let you see the actual unit until move-in. 2. The photos show a 'model unit.' 3. They rush you through the common areas. 4. They can't answer maintenance response time questions. 5. The parking lot is falling apart. 6. Neighbors look uncomfortable when you ask them questions. 7. The lease has a 'no withholding rent for any reason' clause.
Backed out of a lease 48 hours before signing, here's what I found in the contract
The lease had a clause letting the landlord enter with 12-hour notice for 'property inspections at their discretion.' Another clause said I was responsible for ALL pest control even if pest problems existed at move-in. A third said they could charge me for any building maintenance within my unit regardless of cause. I walked.
My upstairs neighbor's schedule is more consistent than any alarm clock I've ever owned
6:07am: drops something heavy. 6:22am: pacing. 6:45am: what sounds like furniture rearrangement but has been happening every day for 8 months so I assume it's not. 11:30pm: the pacing resumes. I have submitted 4 noise complaints. I now just call it 'the ritual.'
Which Charlotte apartment complex actually has the worst management, sharing stories
Not naming names in the title for legal reasons but drop your experience below. Looking for patterns, which companies keep showing up? Which neighborhoods have the most management issues? This is a community resource, not a hit piece.
My roommate stopped paying rent in month 4 and I didn't find out until eviction papers arrived
We each paid the landlord directly, or so I thought. Month 4 he stopped paying his half, never told me. I kept paying mine. Landlord lumped us together and filed joint eviction. My credit took the hit too. In NC, joint leases mean you're both liable for the whole thing. Never again.
My roommate thought the lease ended in April. It ends in August. We are currently in May.
He gave notice to his job, bought a plane ticket to Portland, told all his friends he was leaving. Then actually read the lease. The lease is 14 months, not 12. He is currently sitting on our couch looking at the same wall he's looked at for 4 months. Portland is going to have to wait.
Greystar entered my apartment twice without notice. Here's what NC law actually says.
NC General Statute 42-25.8 requires landlords to provide reasonable notice before entry, typically 24 hours. Greystar entered my unit for a 'routine inspection' with zero notice on a Tuesday while I was at work. I found the inspection slip on my counter when I got home. When I cited the statute, they said it's in my lease that they can enter for inspections. I read the lease. It says 24 hours.
RPM Living ignored my AC repair request for 19 days in July. In Charlotte. In July.
Submitted the request July 3rd. The AC stopped cooling entirely, the unit was blowing warm air and my apartment hit 87 degrees at 10pm. Called the emergency line twice. Sent emails. Finally got a technician on July 22nd. He confirmed the compressor had failed and could have been fixed the first week. RPM offered me a $50 rent credit.
My landlord raised rent $350/month mid-lease. Said it was a 'lease error.' It wasn't.
Private landlord in NoDa. Four months into a 12-month lease, she sent a letter saying the rent we agreed on was a typo and the 'correct' rent is $350 higher. I have the signed lease. I have the original listing. I have the email confirmation of the rent amount. She threatened to not renew. My lease says otherwise. I called Legal Aid of North Carolina.
I won my deposit dispute in small claims court. Here's exactly how I did it.
They kept $1,150 of my $1,400 deposit, citing carpet replacement and cleaning. I had 247 photos from move-in, a professional cleaning receipt, and a witness who helped me move out. Filed in Mecklenburg County Small Claims. The judge asked to see my documentation. Management showed up with a two-page typed list and no photos. I got $1,150 back plus court costs.
Almost got auto-renewed into another year without realizing it. Read your renewal notice.
My lease had a 60-day auto-renewal clause buried in section 14. If I didn't give written notice by April 1st, it automatically renewed for another 12 months. I got a 'friendly reminder' email from management on March 28th, four days before the deadline. They knew. Always check your lease's notice requirements and put it in your calendar the day you sign.
Ballantyne is beautiful, isolating, and I'm moving out after 18 months
The apartments are newer, the roads are clean, the grocery stores are nice. But I went a full weekend last month without speaking to another person in person and I live alone. Everything requires a car. There's no 'neighborhood' energy, it's more like an outdoor mall where people sleep. If you're married with kids and a car, it's probably great. As a single person in my early 30s, it hollowed me out.
My utility bill in a 'luxury' South End high-rise was $287 last August. Here's why.
The building uses a RUBS system, Ratio Utility Billing System, where they take the total building utility cost and divide it among units proportionally. I have no control over what my neighbors use. My unit's share in August was $287 for electricity and water combined. The leasing brochure mentioned 'utility-included apartments.' It was in the fine print: only trash and sewer are included.
My AC went out June 28th and wasn't fixed until July 31st. I documented everything.
Filed the initial request June 28th. Maintenance came July 5th and said they needed a part. Part came July 19th, wrong part. Correct part ordered July 21st, arrived July 28th, installed July 31st. That's 33 days in a Charlotte summer. The apartment hit 91 degrees on July 14th. I have 33 dated photos, every email, and every maintenance ticket. They offered a $100 credit. I said no.
Got my full $1,600 deposit back, here's the exact checklist I used at move-out
Professional cleaning service ($180), spackle and touch-up paint for 4 nail holes, replaced two light bulbs that were burned out, cleaned oven with a kit, washed all windows. On move-out day, I walked through with the property manager and asked her to sign the inspection report while we were still together. Check arrived 18 days later. Full $1,600. The work and the documentation both matter.
The parking garage at my complex has 47 rules posted on one sign. I have read 12 of them.
It's laminated. It's in Arial 8pt. There are rules about idling, about the direction you can pull through, about which spots require a permit on which days, about reserved spots on even vs. odd dates for some reason. I've been here 10 months. I follow the rules I understand and pray about the rest. I have yet to be towed. This feels like luck.
The leasing office wished me a happy birthday. I have been trying to get a maintenance ticket opened for 3 weeks.
Got an automated happy birthday email from my apartment complex at 8:07am. It had my name spelled correctly, a coupon for a free coffee at the resident lounge, and a gif of balloons. I have an open maintenance ticket from 22 days ago about a window that won't fully close. The birthday email has a reply-to address. The maintenance tickets say 'do not reply to this email.'
Complex threw a 'community bonding' event at 11am on a Tuesday. 6 people came.
The email said 'mark your calendars!' It was a taco bar in the courtyard. 11am, Tuesday, March. The property manager, two maintenance guys helping set up, one retired resident, a person who seemed to be on a work call the entire time, and me, who went specifically to have material for this post. The tacos were good. The bonding was minimal. I did learn my maintenance guy's name is Carlos, which actually is useful.
I negotiated my rent DOWN at renewal. Here's exactly what I said.
When the renewal quote came in at $1,890, I sent one email. Two days later they countered at $1,810. I pushed again. We settled at $1,760, which is $20 less than what I'm paying now. They had a 'waitlist.' I called that bluff.
Required to use their renters insurance vendor at $45/month. The same coverage is $11 on Lemonade.
My lease requires renters insurance through an 'approved vendor.' Their approved vendor charges $45/month for $25,000 personal property coverage. I found identical coverage on Lemonade for $11. They won't accept Lemonade. This is pure revenue extraction and everyone should know it's happening.
Controversial take: South End is overpriced and the neighborhood peaked in 2022. Discuss.
I'm ready to say it. South End was a real neighborhood for about 4 years. It's now a collection of interchangeable high-rises where nobody knows their neighbors, the 'local' spots are mostly chains at this point, and you're paying 2022 peak prices for a 2026 neighborhood that feels like it lost its identity.
What's your real all-in monthly cost after every fee, utility, and add-on?
Not the base rent. The actual number you transfer every month when everything is counted. I'll go first: advertised $1,750, actual $2,190 after parking, pet, trash valet, RUBS utilities, required insurance, and tech fee.
Corporate property management at scale is broken in Charlotte and I don't see a path to fixing it
I've lived in 5 Charlotte apartments managed by 4 different corporate property managers over 8 years. The pattern is identical every time: good first year, staff turnover, degraded service, aggressive fees at renewal. It's not individual management failures. It's the business model.
Is a $500 admin fee actually legal in North Carolina?
My lease shows a $500 'administrative processing fee' on top of a $350 application fee. I know NC doesn't cap application fees but this admin fee feels made up. Has anyone successfully pushed back on this?
NoDa vs Plaza Midwood, real talk for someone in their late 20s
I've been narrowing it down to these two. NoDa feels more fun but the rent is getting ridiculous. Plaza Midwood has character but I've heard parking is a nightmare. Who actually lives in both and can compare?
This complex charges a $15/month 'amenity fee' for a pool that's been closed for 2 years
Renewing my lease and noticed a $15 amenity fee that's been on every bill. Asked about it. Got told it covers 'community upkeep.' The pool they reference in the brochure has been drained since COVID. Still waiting on a real answer.
Moving to Charlotte solo in August, where should I actually live?
Taking a job at Novant. Have about $1,800/month budget for rent. I want to be able to walk to something, feel safe walking at night, and not spend 45 minutes commuting. What are renters here actually recommending?
Found a great apartment in Wesley Heights, sharing details because the internet helped me
Moved in three months ago. $1,450 for a 1BR with a real kitchen, responsive maintenance (24hr turnaround twice), and a property manager who actually answers her phone. No amenity fees. Parking included. Passing it forward.
Submitted 14 maintenance requests. Got 2 responses. Here's my paper trail.
Mold in the bathroom wall (not cosmetic, verified by a contractor friend), broken HVAC unit all of July, and a back door that doesn't fully lock. I have screenshots of every request. Management says they 'have no record.' I do.
Can my landlord actually keep my entire deposit because I broke the lease 2 weeks early?
Got a job offer in another city. Gave 60-day notice. Lease technically ended 2 weeks after my last day. Now they're saying they're keeping the $1,500 deposit entirely. NC law question: is this enforceable?
Is South End still worth it or has the vibe completely changed?
Lived here for 4 years. When I moved in it felt like a real neighborhood. Now it's luxury buildings where nobody speaks to each other, half the local spots are gone, and rent is up 40% since 2020. Is anyone else feeling this or am I just getting old?
The property manager tried to gaslight me about my own lease
I found a clause in my lease about a 'lease initiation fee' I'd never been told about. When I asked about it at signing, she said 'don't worry about that clause, it's standard.' At move-out, they charged me $450 using that exact clause. Always read the full lease.
Moved in to find the 'renovated' kitchen was just painted over old damage
The listing said 'fully renovated.' The photos showed a beautiful kitchen. What I got: new cabinet doors slapped on rotting frames, new paint over what I now believe is water damage in two places, and a dishwasher that leaks after two uses. It was staged for photos.
Remote worker moving to Charlotte, Uptown vs Myers Park vs Cotswold?
Work from home full-time. Budget is $1,700-$2,100. Want walkability, good coffee shops to work from, and somewhere that doesn't feel isolated. These three feel different but I can't tell from Zillow photos. What are renters saying?
Paid $300 in application fees across 4 apartments. Only one ever told me I was rejected.
Three of them just... went silent. No denial letter, no refund, no acknowledgment. In North Carolina, application fees are non-refundable regardless of outcome. $300 gone. I now refuse to apply anywhere with a fee over $50 and ask for their approval timeline upfront.
Best roommate I ever had, we're still friends 3 years later
Found her through the CLT Roommates Facebook group. She was an ICU nurse at Atrium, I worked mornings at a tech startup in South End. Completely opposite schedules so we almost never disrupted each other. We split everything 50/50 with a shared spreadsheet and never once argued about money. Genuinely miss living with her.
My roommate left 4 months early and I couldn't afford the unit alone
She got a job in Austin and gave me 3 weeks notice on a 12-month lease. We were both on it. She just walked. I tried to find a replacement roommate in 3 weeks while working full-time. Couldn't do it. Had to break the lease myself and ate a $2,400 early termination fee. She Venmo'd me $200 as an apology.
How do people actually find trustworthy roommates in Charlotte? Genuine question.
I've tried Facebook groups, Roomies.com, and Craigslist. Facebook feels like a gamble, Roomies has a lot of people who ghost, and Craigslist is Craigslist. I'm looking for a second person to split a 2BR in Plaza Midwood around $900 each. What's actually worked for people here?
Roommate wants to add her boyfriend to the lease. Should I be worried?
He's been here essentially full-time for 3 months. She asked the landlord about adding him and now he's going through the application. On one hand, it feels fair if he's going to live here. On the other hand, that's a third person in a 2BR and I had zero say in choosing him. The rent would go down for both of us but something feels off.
Found out my roommate had been subletting her room on Airbnb while traveling for work
She traveled a lot for her job, I thought. Turns out she'd been listing her room on Airbnb and pocketing money while strangers slept 15 feet from my bedroom. I had no idea. Our lease explicitly prohibits subletting. If management had found out, we'd both have been evicted. I confronted her. She did not see the problem.
We wrote a 3-page roommate agreement and it was the best decision we ever made
Before moving in together in Cotswold, my roommate and I wrote out cleaning schedules, guest policies, thermostat ranges, quiet hours, and a process for resolving disputes. Sounds excessive. Saved us from at least a dozen arguments over 18 months. When we disagreed, we referred to the document like it was a constitution. Zero drama. 10/10 recommend.
Camden retaliated after I filed a building code complaint. Here's the timeline.
Filed a complaint with Mecklenburg County Code Enforcement in January about a persistent mold issue in my unit. February: got a lease non-renewal notice, citing 'community fit.' March: my parking spot was reassigned. April: maintenance started taking 3+ weeks to respond to anything. I'm not saying it's definitely retaliation. I'm saying the timing is interesting.
MAA (Mid-America Apartment): honest review after 2 years at their Ballantyne property
Year 1: responsive, reasonable. Year 2: completely different staff, maintenance tickets closed without being fixed, renewal quote came in at 18% over current rent with 4 days to decide. When I said I needed more time, the leasing agent said 'we have a waitlist for your unit.' I moved out. The unit sat empty for 6 weeks.
Cortland told me the noise issue was 'my subjective experience.' The sound meter said otherwise.
Upstairs unit had a dog that would pace and bark from 11pm to 2am. Filed 7 complaints. Cortland's response was that after investigating, they found no noise violation. I bought a $40 decibel meter. The dog consistently hit 68-72dB at midnight in my bedroom. I sent them the recordings. They stopped responding to my emails entirely.
Lincoln Property Company charged me a $200 'lease processing fee' to renew my existing lease
Not a new lease. A renewal. Same unit, same tenant, same terms except for a 9% rent increase. There was a new $200 'lease processing fee' I'd never been charged before. When I asked what it covers, I was told it's a 'standard administrative cost.' I pushed back in writing. After two weeks they removed it, but only because I pushed.
Hawthorne kept my $1,400 deposit and sent a collections notice for $780 more
Moved out after 14 months at a Hawthorne property in University City. Left it cleaner than I found it. Move-out report arrived 31 days later, NC requires it within 30. Even though the report came late, they still kept the full deposit and sent me a $780 collection notice for 'resurfacing' and 'deep cleaning.' I'm disputing both the timeline and the charges.
They billed me $425 for a 'broken towel bar' I reported on my move-in checklist
The towel bar in the master bath was already loose when I moved in. I noted it on my move-in inspection sheet, took a photo, and submitted it the same day. At move-out, the charge appeared on my itemized list: $425 for 'damaged bathroom hardware requiring full replacement.' I emailed them my photo with the timestamp. They removed the charge after 3 emails, no apology.
Charged $870 for 'full carpet replacement' on carpets that were already 8 years old
NC law says landlords can only charge for depreciated value of carpet, not full replacement cost, if the carpet was already worn. My unit's carpet was installed in 2016. I lived there for 2 years. Their invoice showed $870 for 'carpet replacement.' I filed a response citing the depreciation argument and requesting documentation of the carpet's installation date. They settled at $180.
Lost $650 because I didn't take photos at move-in. Sharing so you don't do the same.
First apartment out of college. I was so excited I never documented anything at move-in. Pre-existing scratches on the hardwood, a scuff on the bedroom door, a bathroom exhaust fan that didn't work, none of it documented. At move-out, every single one of those things appeared on my charges. No photos, no recourse. $650 gone. Take photos of everything. Every inch.
Management sent my deposit itemization on day 32. NC law says 30 days. Does this matter?
I moved out June 1st. Got the itemized deposit letter on July 3rd, that's 32 days. NC G.S. 42-52 requires return of the deposit or itemization within 30 days. They're trying to keep $890. Is the 2-day delay enough to void their ability to withhold? Has anyone actually used this successfully?
Early termination clause says I owe 2 months rent, is this negotiable?
Lost my job at the end of March. Lease runs through October. The early termination clause says I owe 2 months rent ($3,900) to break it. I can't afford that without a job. Has anyone been able to negotiate this down, especially with a documented hardship? Or does the landlord have no incentive to work with you?
Can I sublet my room for 2 months while I'm traveling for work?
My lease has a standard 'no subletting without written consent' clause. I travel for work August and September and paying $1,700/month for an empty apartment seems crazy. Has anyone successfully gotten written consent from a property manager for a short-term sublet? What did you say in the request?
My lease says 'no pets' but also charges a $45/month 'pet fee', what does this mean?
I'm looking at a lease that has a 'no pets' clause in section 6 but section 11 has a $45/month 'pet fee' and a $300 'pet deposit.' My agent says the 'no pets' clause means 'no pets without approval' and I'd need to get a pet addendum. But then what does the fee in section 11 mean if pets aren't allowed? This feels contradictory.
Co-signer situation: what does my dad actually agree to if he co-signs my lease?
I'm a first-year teacher, income is $38,000/year, and I don't meet the standard 3x rent requirement for the apartment I want. The landlord says a co-signer would work. Before I ask my dad, I want to understand: is he just guaranteeing that I pay, or is he actually on the hook for the full lease if something happens? NC specific answers welcome.
The lease renewal offer wasn't an offer, it was a deadline disguised as one
Got a renewal letter that said 'your renewal offer is enclosed.' The letter was dated October 5th. At the bottom in small text: 'offer expires October 12th.' That's 7 days to decide whether to commit to another 12 months at 14% higher rent. When I asked for more time, they said the unit was 'in demand.' I left. The unit sat empty for weeks.
Military clause in NC, does it apply to my situation?
I'm active duty at Fort Mill and just got PCS orders. My lease runs 8 more months. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act says I can terminate with 30-day notice after PCS orders are issued. My landlord says that only applies if the base is more than 35 miles away. I can't find that 35-mile rule anywhere in the SCRA text. Is she making that up?
They changed the lease terms between the draft and the final version I signed. Same day.
Received a draft lease Monday, reviewed it, had one small change made. Signed the 'final' version Wednesday. Didn't re-read the whole thing, big mistake. A clause about guest parking had been changed, a utility responsibility had shifted, and the late fee structure was different. All changes that favored the landlord. I didn't notice for three months.
Dilworth vs Myers Park, the honest comparison no realtor will give you
Both are walkable, both are expensive, both have old trees and old houses converted to rentals. Dilworth feels younger, has more bars and coffee shops, and the walkability score is genuinely useful. Myers Park feels quieter and more residential, but you'll need a car for almost everything. Dilworth also has more apartments; Myers Park is mostly single-family rentals from private landlords. My take: Dilworth for your 20s, Myers Park for your 30s.
University City honest review: what they don't tell you on the apartments websites
The good: cheaper rent than inside the loop, easy access to I-85, UNCC campus energy nearby if you want it. The bad: it is car-dependent to a degree that surprised me. There is no walkable grocery within a reasonable distance of most apartments. The light rail stops are useful if you work Uptown but not if you need to get anywhere else. If you work at UNC Charlotte or have a car and need affordability, it works. Otherwise, think twice.
The Steele Creek commute is no joke and nobody warned me
I moved to Steele Creek for the price, got a 2BR for $1,480 which felt impossible in 2025. Then I started commuting to South End for work. Route 85 to 277 adds up to 40-55 minutes each way on a good day. On a bad day I've sat on the Billy Graham Parkway for an hour. Factor that commute cost in time and gas and the 'deal' gets smaller fast.
East Charlotte gets a bad reputation but I've lived here 2 years and want to defend it
Yes, it's more car-dependent than NoDa or Dilworth. Yes, the housing stock is older. But the rent is real, I pay $1,100 for a 1BR that would be $1,700 in South End. My neighbors know my name. There are incredible restaurants, mostly Latin American, that the Charlotte food press ignores. It's not for everyone but the negative reputation overstates the reality for most renters.
Living Uptown: the noise issue is real and no one talks about it on the tour
The leasing office will tell you about the light rail access, the restaurants, the 'urban energy.' They will not tell you about the 2am bar crowd noise on weekends, the fire station two blocks away, or the weekend concerts that you can hear from your unit even with windows closed. I love Uptown and I'm staying, but you should know what you're choosing.
SouthPark vs Myers Park for renters who aren't buying anytime soon
SouthPark has the mall, newer apartment buildings, and feels more like a polished suburb. Myers Park feels more established, has more character, but rental inventory is tiny and mostly through private landlords with older units. SouthPark will get you a nicer apartment with amenities. Myers Park might get you more space in an older building with more quirks. Neither is walkable in the way South End or NoDa is.
Huntersville is 30 minutes from everything and I keep forgetting that before I fall for the rent prices
Every few months I see a gorgeous 2BR in Huntersville for $1,350 and think seriously about it. Then I Google the commute to Uptown: 35-45 minutes without traffic. Then I Google the commute with traffic: 55-70 minutes. Huntersville is a good place to live if your job is in the northern suburbs or you work from home full-time. If you have to be downtown regularly, the math doesn't math.
I tracked every dollar I spent in Charlotte for 6 months as a renter. Here's the breakdown.
Rent $1,720, utilities avg $145, renter's insurance $28, parking $0 (included), groceries $380, restaurants $290, car payment + insurance $485, gas $95. That's $3,143/month before subscriptions, clothes, or anything fun. Take-home on my $72k salary is $4,750. I save $1,607/month. That feels ok until I think about ever buying something here.
Paid $150/month for a 'premium parking space' that's a regular spot painted with a different number
The leasing office sells 'premium' parking spaces nearest to the elevator for $150/month vs. $75/month for 'standard.' After 6 months I realized the only difference is the spot number and proximity to the elevator door by about 30 feet. The spaces are identical. I switched to standard and saved $900/year.
Moved from NYC to Charlotte for a finance job. What I got wrong in my head.
I thought $1,800 would feel luxurious after paying $2,400 for a studio in Crown Heights. And the apartment is beautiful, way more space. What I underestimated: I own a car now ($580/month all-in), groceries are pricier than I expected, and the 'walkability' of South End doesn't mean NYC walkability. I still love it. But the savings aren't as dramatic as the raw rent numbers suggested.
Came from DC for a corporate relocation and picked the wrong neighborhood first
My company put me in a corporate apartment in Ballantyne for 60 days, nice unit, terrible fit for a 28-year-old who wants to walk to things. Used those 60 days to actually explore the city on weekends. Landed in NoDa. The rent was $200 more than Ballantyne but I actually leave my apartment now. If you're being relocated, do not let HR pick your neighborhood.
Nobody told me about Charlotte summers and my electric bill paid my tuition equivalent
Moved from Portland, Oregon. August was a personal experience I was not prepared for. 97 degrees and 85% humidity is a different category of hot than I'd ever experienced. My AC ran constantly. Electric bill hit $310 in August on a 950 sq ft unit. September was almost as bad. If you're moving from anywhere with mild summers, budget for utilities in summer, it's not optional.
Moving from Atlanta and Charlotte still surprised me. Here's what I missed.
I came expecting a smaller Atlanta with cheaper rent. Charlotte has cheaper rent (mostly true), but it's less dense and the transit gap is significant, MARTA spoiled me badly. Charlotte's light rail is good for one corridor. Everything else is a car. Also: Charlotte has no nightlife past 2am, which I learned by showing up somewhere at 2:15am to a dark building. Cultural adjustment is real.
Moving to Charlotte from Chicago, is car ownership truly non-negotiable?
I've never owned a car. In Chicago I never needed one. I'm taking a remote job and moving to Charlotte in September. I'm genuinely trying to understand: can I live car-free in Charlotte? I'm looking at Uptown or South End. I see the light rail on the map. Is it actually usable for day-to-day life, or am I romanticizing it?
American cockroaches showed up week 3. Management said it was 'my fault for leaving food out.'
I moved into a ground-floor unit in a large complex in Matthews. Week 3, American cockroaches, the big ones, started appearing in the kitchen at night. I called immediately. Management sent pest control who sprayed and left. Two weeks later: more roaches. Second treatment. Management's written response: 'This may be related to food storage practices.' I have a sealed pantry and empty sink. I have photos from week 3.
Bathroom ceiling leaked for 6 weeks before they fixed it. Mold confirmed after.
Noticed a water stain on my bathroom ceiling in February. Submitted a maintenance request February 9th. Multiple follow-ups. They came March 15th, five weeks later, and patched the drywall. April: the stain came back. Had a contractor friend look at it. Mold behind the patch, likely been there since at least January. Now I'm fighting with management about whether the unit is habitable.
The emergency maintenance line answered in 7 minutes. Sharing because it doesn't happen often.
Pipe under my kitchen sink burst at 11:30pm on a Saturday. Called the emergency maintenance line expecting the usual voicemail loop. Someone answered on the second ring. They had a plumber at my unit by 12:45am. Damage was limited because of the fast response. I know this sounds unremarkable but based on this community's posts, I felt like it was worth sharing that it can work right.
They closed my plumbing ticket as 'resolved' before anyone showed up
Shower drain backed up completely, water standing 6 inches during a 5-minute shower. Filed ticket Monday. Tuesday morning: got an automated 'your request has been resolved' email. Nobody had come. Called the office. They said 'maintenance marked it complete.' Re-filed the ticket. Same thing happened Wednesday. On Thursday I knocked on the office door in person. Drain was fixed by Friday. Always follow up in person.
My landlord in Plaza Midwood lowered my rent by $75 to keep me. Private landlord things.
I've rented from the same private landlord for 3 years. She owns 4 units in Plaza Midwood and manages them herself. At my third renewal, I mentioned I'd been looking at other options. She called me the next day and offered to drop the increase from $100 to $25, then called again the following week and offered to go $75 under current market to keep me. Small landlords with long-term tenants sometimes just want stability.
Maintenance fixed my HVAC, identified 2 issues I hadn't noticed, and fixed those too
Submitted a request for AC that was cycling on and off. Tech came the next morning, fixed the thermostat wiring that was causing the cycling, then noticed my dryer vent was partially clogged and a bathroom exhaust fan was rattling from a loose mount. Fixed all three without me asking. I've been here 7 months. That level of proactive care is rare and worth naming when it happens.
My neighbor leaves a single, specific passive-aggressive note every time it rains
Whenever it rains I leave my umbrella in the hallway to drip-dry. Every time, without fail, there is a handwritten note the next morning: 'Please remember hallways are shared spaces for ALL residents :)' The smiley face is doing heavy lifting. I have never seen this person. I believe they may only exist when it rains. I have started leaving a thank-you note in return.
The resident portal has a section called 'Community Events.' It has not been updated since April 2023.
There is a listing for a 'Spring Mixer' with details TBD. There is a sign-up sheet for a 'Holiday Cookie Exchange' that the link leads to a dead Google Form. There is a photo gallery section with exactly two photos: a sunset and a dog in the courtyard, both uploaded by the same account called 'ResidentLife_CLT' that has not posted since. The section is prominently featured in the welcome email.
My unit was listed on Airbnb while I was living in it. I found out when a stranger knocked on my door.
A man knocked on my door at 8pm on a Friday, said he'd booked this unit on Airbnb for the weekend. I told him I lived here. He showed me the listing. My unit, my furniture, my photos in the background of the images, listed by my subletting roommate who I thought was traveling for work.
Switched from a Class A complex to a private landlord. Never going back.
Was paying $2,100/month at a Cortland property in South End. Moved to a private landlord's 2BR in Wesley Heights for $1,650. The unit is older. The appliances are older. Every single other metric of renting quality is better.
Paying $1,875/month to live next to a construction site they said would take 6 months. Month 14.
When I signed my lease, the leasing agent mentioned 'some construction activity' on the adjacent lot that would be 'wrapping up by early fall.' I'm writing this in May. The crane has been running since March of last year. 7am every weekday. The windows rattle.
Can I negotiate the mandatory trash valet fee off my lease? Asking for documentation.
My lease has a $32/month mandatory 'Valet Waste Services' line item. I would prefer to carry my own trash to the dumpster 40 feet from my door. I've asked twice and been told it's non-negotiable. Has anyone successfully gotten this removed or reduced?
My building's 'smart home system' has been down for 47 days. The app still charges $18/month.
The smart home app controls the thermostat, door lock, and package notifications. It stopped working April 3rd. Maintenance says it's 'a system issue being resolved.' The $18 technology fee on my rent bill remains unchanged and was charged again May 1st.
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