The rental market is very supportive in Aruba
Rent: Can tenants and landlords agree to rent freely in Aruba?
The rent may generally be freely determined
by the parties in a tenancy agreement. The increase in such rents can also be
determined freely. promotions
Caribbean Aruba Islands
Certain immovable categories, however, are
subject to obligatory rules on rent determination (Ordinance On The Rent
Assessment Advisory Committee (1991) known as the Ordinance). These obligatory
rules apply to buildings of less than AWG 100,000 (approximately US$55,000)
including residential housing, shops, bars, restaurants, hotels and offices
except hotel buildings, airports and sea ports. The Rent Assessment Advisory
Committee - known as the 'Committee' - shall be responsible for establishing
the rent and any request for an increase of that rental in accordance with the
mandatory rules of law. The Committee will base the rent on the building cost
percentage.
In practice, most landlords do not turn to
the Committee to decide on rent despite these obligatory law rules. They often
conclude agreements with tenants and decide the rent with each other's
agreement.
Deposits for Security
Neither the Aruba Ordinance nor the Civil
Code contains provisions on deposits or rental deposits (In Aruba there is no
distinction between security or rental deposits).
What rights have property owners and
tenants in Aruba, in particular regarding contract duration and expulsion?
There is a difference between contracts for
indefinite time periods and contracts for a certain time period.
Contracts for indefinite term
Aruba Strandhouses
The landlord must first be permitted to end
an indefinite tenancy by the Committee. The tenant should observe the agreed
term or notice or a reasonable notice period if the parties do not agree to a
warning term.
Contracts for specified time periods
Even after the expiry date, the tenant
cannot terminate the tenancy agreement without permission from the committee,
where the tenant wants to extend it. The tenant may however terminate the
tenancy agreement after the term has expired.
In principle, only by mutual consent
between landlord and tenant is the premature termination of the tenancy
agreement permitted.
If a written tenancy agreement expires but
the tenant still lives in the rented house, it is considered a renewed tenancy
agreement. The renewed tenancy agreement will be an indefinite tenancy
agreement.
The owner may request permission from the
Committee to terminate the tenancy agreement. For the following reasons, the
Committee shall grant permission:
The tenant will not pay the rent in time or
use the house as a good manager.
Under special circumstances, if the
landlord has a legitimate interest in terminating the tenancy agreement, the
committee may accept other reasons.
Both the landlord and the tenant may also
ask the Aruba Tribunal, in default of the other party or exceptional
circumstances, to dissolve the tenancy agreement.
The landlord may open evictions before the
Court of First Instance of Aruba after the expiry of the tenancy contract in
case the tenant is not willing to surrender the premises. In principle, the
landlord should first notify the tenant before such eviction is initiated.
The tenancy agreement shall not be
terminated if the landlord wishes to sell the house, unless this is agreed in
advance by the landlord and tenant.
How effective is the law of Aruban?
Aruba Caribbean Real State
In case a tenant does not pay the rent, the
landlord may request the tenancy agreement to be dissolved through court
proceedings. The landlord may also commence legal proceedings to collect the
rent.
The landlord can also request the tenant's
eviction. It may begin summary proceedings, which take about 2 to 6 weeks, to
obtain an eviction judgment. However, the landlord should open a proceedings on
the merits to dissolve a tenancy agreement, which may last for approximately
one year.
Legislation
Ordinance of the 1991 Civil Code of Aruba
Rent Assessment Advisory Committee.
Brief History: Recent changes in the Aruban
property and tenant legislation
The Netherlands Antilles are an autonomous
civil law area of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, which is located in the
Caribbean and comprises two island groups, Curaçao South and Bonaire South and
Sint Maarten Saba South North and Eustatius North (east of Puerto Rico).
However, the island of Aruba was constitutionally separated from the
Netherlands Antilles in 1986 following a referendum, but it still is part of
the Netherlands. Aruba has established the Aruba Civil Code, similar in many
respects to the Netherlands Antilles Civil Code. In Aruba, in recent decades
there has been no radical intrinsic de-regulation or re-regulation in the rent
legislation.
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