It can be a delicate balancing act between maintaining long term tenants and giving rent increases. Indeed, this has become an even more relevant conversation due to the meteoric increase in rents over the last handful of years. And, there is no one right answer. Personally, I tend to give few and mild increases to my long-term tenants for many reasons. First, I bought my rentals during the great foreclosure crisis and my costs are simply less. Second, I’m busy and I appreciate tenants I don’t have to babysit and frankly put a premium on more pleasant landlord tenant relationships. But, what if you’re not in my position and you have a newer rental property? The risk calculation always is will the rent increase push the tenant out? Well, right now the rental market is severe for tenants: no vacancies, higher rents across the board. So, this is less of a risk than it has been. But, it’s always important to crunch numbers. That $50 a month increase that generates $600 annually that just really pissed your tenant off and caused them to move out, will it be offset by a new tenant with higher rent? It depends how good you are at turnovers and what your costs are. If you use a rental agent, their commission just ate up that added revenue and there are always some turnover costs even if it’s just cleaning. Take away, turnovers cost money. Do the math.