I want to convert a one family house to a two family. Do I need separate meters for gas and electricity for both units?


Comments

  1. Another thing you might do is to spilt the common bill according to sq. footage of units. Keeps you both sort of in line. But talking to the tenant is probably the best.

  2. might be unethical, but I screen for personality. I ask a lot of questions about their lifestyle. After many years this has worked well for me. I have always had loveley. respectful tenants.

  3. Ouch! Second post is a little severe. We changed the C of O on a one family to a two, but left one meter for both gas and electric. Utilities are factored into the rent. It would have been far too costly for us to have all the gas and electric lines re-run to separate into two meters. Con Ed was less than cooperative about coming to do it, too. We watched the increase in our bills month to month and adjusted the monthly rent accordingly. It’s worked out for us. If you are in early stages of construction and can run separate lines – by all means do it, but we’ve done just fine without.

  4. Do you want to pay for the other unit to leave the lights on 24×7 and to keep the AC set at 60F all summer, regargless of the temp outside? If yes, then don’t get a separate meter, and just split the cost and subsidise the other unit.

    But if you want the other unit to have to pay for what ever wasteful or furgal use they have, then get that second meter.

  5. If the utilities are going to be included in the rent you do not. If you want the gas and electric bills to be separate from the rent, yes.