No. A Tenancy Agreement is a contract between a landlord and a tenant that establishes a lease on residential space. This agreement allows a tenant to occupy that space for an established period of time for a rental fee. A Tenancy Agreement outlines things like the cost of rent, the rights and responsibilities of both parties, and the length of the lease.
A Flatmate Agreement is a contract between flatmates that doesn’t involve the landlord. It establishes agreed-upon rules and expectations between the residents that cohabitate a space together.
If you have a flatmate moving in and would like to create a flatmate lease, consider creating a Sublease Agreement Sublease Agreement in addition to a Flatmate Agreement. This document allows you to assign part of an existing lease to another tenant.
If there is a discrepancy between the flatmate agreement and the tenancy agreement, the tenancy agreement generally prevails. This is because the flatmate agreement governs the relationship between flatmates, but the tenancy agreement governs the property.
For example, if a flatmate agreement stated parties can only be held on weekend evenings, but the tenancy agreement states no parties can be held at all, the tenancy agreement supersedes the flatmate agreement and no parties can be held at all.
How do I write a Flatmate Agreement?
LawDepot’s Flatmate Agreement template allows you to create a legal document customised to your needs.
Details of the Residential Tenancy Agreement
Using our Flatmate Agreement template, select whether or not there is a written agreement (known as a lease agreement or tenancy agreement) with the landlord. State the address of the property.
If there is a written agreement with the landlord of the property, you’ll need to provide some details on the tenancy. State the date the tenancy started, the expected end date, and the landlord’s name.
Next, note the names of all the flatmates. You can add as many names as needed.
Select when you want the Flatmate Agreement to end. You can choose for it to end when the Tenancy Agreement ends, on a fixed end date (either a specific date or after a predetermined time has passed), or for it to renew automatically.
Rights and responsibilities for flatmates
Provide details regarding rent payments, such as how often the tenants pay rent. If you aren’t sure about this information, you can also say that the rent details are specified in the tenancy agreement. If you provided a damage deposit as part of your tenancy agreement, provide this information as well.
Next, you and your flatmates can outline the details regarding bill payments. Establish which utilities the rent includes and who’s responsible for them. Determine how you’ll handle household costs and expenses. You can choose to split costs equally, divide them in the same proportions as the rent payments, or decide not to specify this detail in the Flatmate Agreement.
House rules and expectations
Now you have the opportunity to establish house rules. Our template allows you to establish rules from the following categories:
- Smoking
- Alcohol
- Illegal activities
- Parties, gatherings, celebrations
- Quiet hours
- Guests
- Personal property
- Other
After establishing flat rules, you can establish obligations regarding duties and restrictions. The Flatmate Agreement form prompts you to select from the following options:
- Cleaning
- Pets
- Parking
- Living arrangements
- Damages
- Other
Finally, determine the grounds for termination. Decide whether one flatmate can terminate the agreement of another and under what circumstances. Determine what kind of notice (if any) the flatmate must provide before leaving the agreement. Some flatmates include policies requiring the leaving flatmate to supply a forwarding address and remove their property.
If you want to add any additional clauses, our template allows you to do so. Lastly, determine the signing details of the document. Now, you are ready to finalise and print your document.