Skip to content

Lettings agent reveals the strange, and expensive things, tenants leave behind

One tenant who left his Range Rover behind. It sat in the parking space with the keys left with the porter. When the letting agent contacted the former tenant informing him that the vehicle needed to be removed, he was told to keep it.
Unfortunately this would have been a bit problematic so after much to-ing and fro-ing, the tenant eventually arranged for someone to pick it up.

That tenant wasn't the only one who left something valuable behind. One letting agent was rather shocked to enter what was supposed to be an unfurnished flat after the tenancy ended only to find that everything had been left behind; furnishings, paintings, designer clothes and even Swarovski figurines. The foreign tenant was already halfway around the world so her possessions were eventually donated to charity.

The same outcome awaited the designer clothes and accessories left behind by a shopaholic. The charity shop was delighted to receive them, especially as they were still in their original bags with the tags attached.
 
Some other interesting items left behind include a toupee left in a biscuit tin in the kitchen, entire window (glass and frame) lying on the bed, fake Grecian columns and statues that had been cemented in situ in the reception room and a case of champagne.

Other less strange, but expensive items, include several cases of knives of all descriptions, a flat screen Bang & Olufsen TV, a set of skis and full set of ski attire, an American fridge freezer despite there being a working integrated fridge already in situ, and a full sized treadmill in the reception room.

‘Just when you think you've seen it all, something comes along to surprise you,’ said Marc von Grundherr, director of Benham & Reeves Lettings.

‘The Range Rover wasn't even the only vehicle we've had left behind. It was just the most expensive. I probably thought about keeping it for a second too long but then realised it would've been hard to transfer the title into the company name,’ he added.

 

Related