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Getting Ready for Rental - the Cottage Audit

By CottageGuru | May 4, 2008

Whether you are a vacation rental owner who has been renting for some time, or new to the the cottage rental business, spring is a busy time preparing for the upcoming rental season. Although my place rents year round and I have honeymooners in there at the moment, I always set aside a week in spring to get ready for the busy time ahead when I don’t have the opportunity to do tasks at leisure.

Once my guests have gone I will be doing my annual Cottage Audit. This is a comprehensive checklist that covers a whole range of things, both inside and outside the cottage, and that will get the place into tip-top condition for the prime rental weeks.

Renters will explore your cottage, outside and in. They will open all drawers and cupboards that are not locked or sealed. They will look under beds and behind furniture. They’ll read anything you have left – except the Cottage Guide! By the time your renters have been in your cottage for a week, they will have missed nothing.

This isn’t intended to frighten you away from renting your property; it is simply a truth. We are a curious species and put in a new place, we generally want to check out the territory, establish our boundaries and mark it as our own – even for a temporary period.

In general, everything is likely to be returned to its rightful state by the time you arrive to do your check and changeover so you may never know. But, given the strong likelihood that no nook has been left unexplored, and no cranny has escaped investigation, it really is worth making sure your guests don’t find anything you would not wish to find yourself.

We rent our cottage year-round so I do two thorough audits – one in the late spring and the second in late September/early October. The fall one coincides with our winterising schedule – cleaning and storing the watercraft; scrubbing decks and powerwashing the siding, but just as I use my spring cleaning to prepare for summer guests, my fall routine has a different flavour.

This time I change the lighter summer comforters to cosy winter duvets; swap some of the artwork to include wintry scenes; and generally create a warmer look in contrast to the cool summer colours and accents. I use a checklist to make sure nothing gets missed and thought I’d share that with you as it has been refined over the past few years and is pretty comprehensive now.

I start a week or so before the fall clean and tour the property as if for the first time. With notepad in hand, I am ultra-critical and just imagine myself as a Bree Vanderkamp (of Desperate Housewives fame), checking every corner, drawer, window frame and toilet bowl with a perfectionists eye. I don’t subscribe to the viewpoint that ‘It’s just a cottage and nobody expects it to be spotless’. I have guests paying a substantial rate to stay in my cottage and they deserve to be treated in a respectful way. That means a pristine presentation, even in an older property. And when it has been in constant use over the summer, there is some wear and tear and a few things that need addressing before I am happy it is ready for my fall and winter guests.

Doing a cottage audit like this may uncover a few things that are likely to be spotted by your eagle-eyed guests. So, here’s a few tips to make sure you’ve covered everything.

Exterior

Interior

Topics: Cottage rental basics |

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