Most landlords wing it. They use the lease they found online, handle maintenance reactively, and screen tenants by gut feeling. This playbook is for the ones who want systems — repeatable, documented, landlord-tested processes that protect the asset and make the work manageable.
Start With Tenant Screening →Six chapters on the operational side of rental property — not investing theory, not buy vs. rent debates, not motivational content. This is the work: how to find and screen tenants, build a lease that holds up, collect rent without drama, maintain the asset intelligently, and build toward a portfolio that does not consume your life.
A landlord reacts. A phone call comes in and they handle it. A tenant is late and they figure out what to do. A unit turns over and they scramble to fill it. Everything is improvised because there are no systems — just responses.
An operator anticipates. They have a written policy for late rent that goes into effect automatically on day four. They have a move-in checklist that takes twenty minutes and prevents security deposit disputes two years later. They have a contractor they call for every maintenance issue — not a new search every time something breaks. They have a lease that actually says what happens when a tenant gets a dog without asking.
New landlords before their first tenant, experienced landlords who keep making the same mistakes, investors scaling from one property to several, anyone who has ever said "I should have that in writing"
Investors focused on deal-finding and acquisition strategy — see our sister site for that. This playbook is purely operational: once you own the property, here is how you run it.
Landlord-tenant law varies significantly by state. This playbook covers principles and best practices that apply broadly, but always verify specific rules — notice periods, security deposit limits, entry requirements, eviction procedures — against your state's statutes before acting.