A man rented a house to sell cats in Nanning, and dozens of cats made his neighbors collapse. Can I hide and keep a cat when renting a house?

When renting a house, you can't hide the matter of keeping a cat, because the house is not your own after all, so you must tell the landlord in advance about keeping a pet, and there are clear regulations on keeping a pet in the general rental agreement. Many young people choose to keep pets when renting a house outside, because it is lonely to work hard in a strange city, so they want to solve their loneliness by keeping pets. But after all, renting a house is someone else's house, and some people will share it with others, so keeping a pet still needs careful consideration.

Because not everyone can accept keeping a pet at home, if it is shared, you should discuss it with your roommate before keeping a pet. If the other person doesn't mind, you can reconsider. Because after all, keeping a pet is a big deal, which may affect the rest of roommates, and some people are allergic to pet hair. Renting a house must live in someone else's house. Some landlords are more concerned that tenants want pets at home, especially naughty pets such as cats and dogs.

Because they may bite furniture at ordinary times, and cats may scratch the wall with their claws, which will cause great damage to the landlord's house. Therefore, many landlords will clearly write down the terms about pets in the contract when renting a house. You can also read it carefully before signing the contract, because many landlords have very clear rules that pets are not allowed at home. So if you want to keep a pet at home, you'd better communicate with the landlord in advance and don't hide the fact that the landlord keeps a pet himself.

If it is clearly stated in the contract that pets are not allowed at home, it is a breach of contract to keep them secretly. It is also unreasonable for the landlord to investigate the responsibility or demand compensation.