Available now. This beautiful home is in the Johnson Point area of NE Thurston county. Enjoy easy I-5 access and a short, no traffic commute to points north or south including: Tacoma, Seattle, Lacey, Hawks Prairie or Olympia. Your private nirvana sits along 100' of salt waterfront, has beach access and features exceptional views of Mt. Rainier, Mt. Adams, Anderson Island, Nisqually Reach and the Key Peninsula. This gem offers three bedrooms, two full baths, a bright and cozy eat in kitchen with lots of built in storage. Plus, a large front room with vaulted ceilings and a wall of windows opening onto an expansive deck running the width of the house. Full utility room, pantry and two car garage. Plantation shutters throughout. Prefer no pets but may consider on a case by case basis. No smoking. New interior paint and carpet. Sprinkler system on this property. Water is included in the monthly rent of $3450. This home is for residential use only. We know you will love it! One year lease, owner pays water. First and last month's rent plus security deposit and (pet as applicable) due at lease signing. We will accept your application, tenant screening information, rental history, background check and credit history as offered through Zillow. Landlord may opt to use Smart Move Screening through TransUnion as a secondary source and will notify prospective tenant. RCW 59.18.257 Screening of prospective tenants Notice to prospective tenant Costs Adverse action notice Violation. (1)(a) Prior to obtaining any information about a prospective tenant, the prospective landlord shall first notify the prospective tenant in writing, or by posting, of the following: (i) What types of information will be accessed to conduct the tenant screening; (ii) What criteria may result in denial of the application; (iii) If a consumer report is used, the name and address of the consumer reporting agency and the prospective tenant's rights to obtain a free copy of the consumer report in the event of a denial or other adverse action, and to dispute the accuracy of information appearing in the consumer report; and (iv) Whether or not the landlord will accept a comprehensive reusable tenant screening report made available to the landlord by a consumer reporting agency. If the landlord indicates its willingness to accept a comprehensive reusable tenant screening report, the landlord may access the landlord's own tenant screening report regarding a prospective tenant as long as the prospective tenant is not charged for the landlord's own tenant screening report. (b)(i) The landlord may charge a prospective tenant for costs incurred in obtaining a tenant screening report only if the prospective landlord provides the information as required in (a) of this subsection. (ii) If a prospective landlord conducts his or her own screening of tenants, the prospective landlord may charge his or her actual costs in obtaining the background information only if the prospective landlord provides the information as required in (a) of this subsection. The amount charged may not exceed the customary costs charged by a screening service in the general area. The prospective landlord's actual costs include costs incurred for long distance phone calls and for time spent calling landlords, employers, and financial institutions. (c) If a prospective landlord takes an adverse action, the prospective landlord shall provide a written notice of the adverse action to the prospective tenant that states the reasons for the adverse action. The adverse action notice must contain the following information in a substantially similar format, including additional information as may be required under chapter 19.182 RCW: "ADVERSE ACTION NOTICE Name Address City/State/Zip Code This notice is to inform you that your application has been: ..... Rejected ..... Approved with conditions: ..... Residency requires an increased deposit ..... Residency requires a qualified guarantor ..... Residency requires last month's rent ..... Residency requires an increased monthly rent of $........ ..... Other: Adverse action on your application was based on the following: ..... Information contained in a consumer report (The prospective landlord must include the name, address, and phone number of the consumer reporting agency that furnished the consumer report that contributed to the adverse action.) ..... The consumer credit report did not contain sufficient information ..... Information received from previous rental history or reference ..... Information received in a criminal record ..... Information received in a civil record ..... Information received from an employment verification Dated this ..... day of ........, ....(year) Agent/Owner Signature" (2) Any landlord who maintains a website advertising the rental of a dwelling unit or as a source of information for current or prospective tenants must include a statement on the property's home page stating whether or not the landlord will accept a comprehensive reusable tenant screening report made available to the landlord by a consumer reporting agency. If the landlord indicates its willingness to accept a comprehensive reusable tenant screening report, the landlord may access the landlord's own tenant screening report regarding a prospective tenant as long as the prospective tenant is not charged for the landlord's own tenant screening report. (3) Any landlord or prospective landlord who violates subsection (1) of this section may be liable to the prospective tenant for an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars. The prevailing party may also recover court costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. (4) This section does not limit a prospective tenant's rights or the duties of a screening service as otherwise provided in chapter 19.182 RCW. [ 2016 c 66 s 2; 2012 c 41 s 3; 1991 c 194 s 3.] NOTES: Finding 2012 c 41: "The legislature finds that residential landlords frequently use tenant screening reports in evaluating and selecting tenants for their rental properties. These tenant screening reports purchased from tenant screening companies may contain misleading, incomplete, or inaccurate information, such as information relating to eviction or other court records. It is challenging for tenants to dispute errors until after they apply for housing and are turned down, at which point lodging disputes are seldom worthwhile. The costs of tenant screening reports are paid by applicants. Therefore, applicants who apply for housing with multiple housing providers pay repeated screening fees for successive reports containing essentially the same information." [ 2012 c 41 s 1.] Findings 1991 c 194: See note following RCW 59.18.253.
This property is off market, which means it's not currently listed for sale or rent on Zillow. This may be different from what's available on other websites or public sources.