Rental Property Resources
Most rentals get a few photos and a prayer, and most renters get rushed through paperwork they never get to read. I work the other way. Whether you own an apartment to list or you are hunting for the right one, you get a partner who looks out for your interests and earns the relationship.
Two sides of the table
Massachusetts is clear about this, and so am I. When you work with me as a tenant, I represent you and not the landlord. When a landlord hires me, I market the property and answer to the owner. One client at a time, no blurred lines.
A vacant apartment costs you money every day it sits. The fix is exposure that fits the property, not a one-size template. Every listing gets a real plan, and the mix shifts with what the apartment is and who it is for.
Renting moves fast, and the paperwork hides real consequences. A good representative does more than open doors. They tell you what the neighborhood should cost, push back on terms that are not in your favor, and keep your interests protected from the first showing to the signed lease.
A studio near the commuter rail and a four-bedroom near campus do not reach renters the same way, so they should not be marketed the same way. I build the plan around the apartment: its price point, its location, the renter it is right for, and how fast the market is moving. The tools above are the toolkit. Which ones lead, and how hard each runs, changes with every listing.
Where the market sits
A quick read on rent levels and how fast apartments are leasing across the three towns I work most. Belmont sits at the top of the rent range, while Waltham carries the most available inventory right now.
Advanced rental insights
Median rent is a blunt tool. The useful questions are what you pay per bedroom, where parking and pets are easy or scarce, and which town gives you the most space for the money. Here is the deeper read on the markets I serve.
What a leased apartment rented for, by size, in each town. The gap between towns widens as apartments get bigger.
| Bedrooms | Belmont | Watertown | Waltham |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 bed | $2,400 | $2,475 | $1,995 |
| 2 bed | $3,025 | $3,000 | $2,935 |
| 3 bed | $4,512 | $3,600 | $4,350 |
| 4 bed | $5,900 | $3,900 | $4,300 |
Read this as direction, not gospel. Bedroom counts are drawn from listing detail and figures reflect a smaller sample inside each town, so individual cells move with just a few leases. A one-bedroom in Waltham near $1,995 is the clearest value floor in the three towns. Source: MLSPIN.
Share of leased apartments that came with at least one parking space.
Share of leased apartments that allowed pets.
Median asking rent per square foot on leased apartments. The headline rents fall as you move west, but the price of actual space tells a different story.
Figures reflect MLSPIN listing activity for the most recent 90-day period and cover MLS-listed apartments only. A meaningful share of rentals in these towns is marketed off-market, by owner, and never appears in this data, so the true picture of inventory and pricing is wider than what is shown here. Source: MLSPIN.
Know your rights
Renting should not require a law degree, but a little knowledge protects you on both sides of the lease. These summarize the official state guidance in plain language. For the full text, the Attorney General's guide is one click above.
Under Massachusetts law, a landlord may only ask a tenant for these up-front payments at the start of a tenancy:
That is the complete list. Up-front pet fees, broker fees, and application fees are not allowed at the start of a tenancy. Fees for optional amenities like parking or a fitness center do not have to be included in the advertised rent if you can decline them.
A security deposit must be held in a separate, interest-bearing Massachusetts bank account within the first month of the tenancy, protected from the landlord's creditors. You are owed the bank's name and the account details, plus the interest each year.
Before keeping any of it, the landlord has to do the work. For an owner to withhold funds from a security deposit, the condition of the unit must be photographed and itemized prior to the tenant moving in. That move-in record is what protects you later.
At move-out, the deposit returns within 30 days, minus any lawful deductions for unpaid rent or damage beyond normal wear and tear. If the landlord keeps any portion, they must provide a detailed, written, itemized list of damages within that 30-day window, and that list must include written estimates or actual receipts for the repair work. A number with nothing behind it does not meet the standard.
It is against the law for a landlord to refuse to rent, set different terms, or treat you differently because of who you are. Federal law sets the floor, and Massachusetts adds more protected classes on top.
Federal Fair Housing Act: race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and disability.
Massachusetts adds: ancestry, marital status, age, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, source of income, and military or veteran status. With very limited exceptions, refusing to rent to someone with children is also illegal.
If you feel you have been discriminated against, you can file a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination: file with the MCAD.
A law that took effect August 1, 2025 bars brokers and salespeople from charging a tenant a fee when they primarily provide services to the landlord. The short version: whoever hires the broker pays the broker.
On a landlord-listed apartment I market, the fee sits with the landlord. If you hire me to represent you as a tenant, we agree on those terms up front and in writing, so you always know what you are paying for and why.
Common questions
As of August 1, 2025, a broker cannot charge a tenant a fee when the broker primarily provides services to the landlord. In practice, whoever hires the broker pays the broker. On a landlord-listed apartment I market, the fee sits with the landlord. If you hire me directly to represent you as a tenant, we agree on those terms up front and in writing.
Going direct can work, but you are then negotiating against someone who does this for a living, with no one checking the lease for you. Here is what I bring to your side of the table: I evaluate what listings should rent for in the neighborhood you want, I handle any negotiation on your behalf, I act as a filter that protects your rights as a tenant, I review the lease before you sign, and I educate you on the process so nothing catches you off guard.
Most rentals get a handful of phone photos and a portal post. Mine get a plan built around the specific apartment: a dedicated property website made to be found in search, a produced video, real flyers, created social posts, a direct alert to cooperating agents, and a seven-day paid social campaign. The mix shifts with the listing. The goal stays the same, so your properly priced listing doesn't sit.
Only four things: first month's rent, a security deposit no larger than one month's rent, last month's rent, and the actual cost of a new lock and key. Up-front pet fees, broker fees, and application fees are not permitted at the start of a tenancy under Massachusetts law.
Listing a unit or finding one, the first conversation is free and there is no pressure. Tell me what you are working with and I will tell you, straight, how I can help.
Call 617.515.7715