Maintenance

Bonza Painting Services also provide an array of Property Maintenance Service and ensure all projects are delivered to our client’s satisfaction. Property Maintenance in building service includes cleaning paint surfaces, fixing cracks in both concrete and gyprock, and any general paint touch-ups or surface patching.

Property management and maintenance service may seem like two sides of the same coin. Even though they’re both essential for preserving and enhancing your property’s income and value, they are different disciplines. Whether you manage residential, student housing, or commercial properties, property maintenance service refer to activities involved in the upkeep of your property. Thus, it’s sometimes considered just a subset of overall property management activities.


Of course, property management also includes all of the tasks included in property operations, such as collecting rent, property marketing, accounting, and handling leases. While managing properties requires more than maintaining them, no property owner or manager wants to simply leave such a critical aspect of building management to chance. Take a moment to learn more about various aspects of building maintenance management, why it’s so important, and of course, how to handle it better and more efficiently.

What is Property Management and Why Should it Matter to You?

Property Maintenance Service Defined:

Property Maintenance Service is the strategy and tasks involved in keeping your rental properties in good condition. There are routine property maintenance tasks, such as ensuring fire detectors are in working order, maintenance for pools (if applicable), ensuring lighting is functional, electricity maintenance and so on. There are also larger, less frequent maintenance projects such as roofing maintenance, maintenance for swimming pools, parking lot or walkway paving, etc.


Why Are Property Maintenance Service Critical?

The reason maintenance is so critical is to avoid the unexpected maintenance issues that can arise if the upkeep is ignored.

Besides reducing the risk of property injuries for yourself, your employees, and your tenants, you need to have a good property building maintenance system in place for plenty of other reasons too. Consider just a few examples:

Increased property value: A maintained property will hold value or increase in value. The lack of repairs will detract from the property’s market value and rental prices.

Satisfied tenants: Poor maintenance of buildings, property, and appliances will generate dissatisfied tenants and may break the terms of your own lease.

Reduced costs: An efficient property management program can help save money by minimising risks, extending the life of appliances and equipment, satisfying tenants, and decreasing manual effort.

Less work: Property managers have plenty of work to do. By having a maintenance building system in place, you can reduce the time you spend contacting tenants and owners, tracking work orders, manually entering data in other software, paying invoices, and dealing with emergencies.

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