Rental Property Turnover Checklist
Rental turnovers need to happen fast to minimize vacancy loss. This checklist covers the repairs, cleaning, and updates that get units rent-ready quickly while maximizing ROI on turnover spending.
Turnover Timeline Goals
Standard turnover: 5-7 days Deep turnover (painting, flooring): 10-14 days Major updates (kitchen/bath): 3-4 weeks
Every day vacant = lost rent. Plan the turnover work list for speed + impact.
Immediate Assessment (Day 1)
Walk property with these questions:
- What HAS to be done (safety, function, code)?
- What SHOULD be done (wear, dated, affects marketability)?
- What COULD be done (upgrades for higher rent)?
- What’s my budget vs. expected rent increase?
Document everything:
- Photos of all damage
- List of repairs needed
- Material requirements
- Timeline for each task
Common damage categories:
- Normal wear (repaint, minor fixes)
- Tenant damage (holes, stains, broken items)
- Deferred maintenance (rot, leaks, systems)
- Obsolete/dated (old fixtures, flooring, appliances)
Top 10 High-Impact Fixes (ROI Focused)
1. Fresh paint (walls, trim, doors)
- Biggest visual impact per dollar
- Neutral colors (Agreeable Gray, Repose Gray)
- Eggshell walls, semi-gloss trim
- Cost: $1-3/sq ft
2. Deep clean (every surface)
- Tenants notice cleanliness immediately
- Hire pros or plan 2 full days
- Cost: $150-400 for deep clean
3. Flooring refresh
- LVP if replacing (durable, cheap, fast)
- Professional carpet clean if keeping
- Cost: $2-5/sq ft LVP installed
4. Kitchen and bath caulk/grout
- Mold/mildew staining looks terrible in photos
- Re-caulk tubs, sinks, counters
- Regrout if stained
- Cost: $100-300 DIY
5. Light fixtures and switches
- Cheap, dated fixtures scream “low quality”
- Match modern style ($20-50 per fixture)
- Replace yellowed switches and outlets ($1 each)
- Cost: $100-300 total
6. Cabinet hardware
- Handles and knobs update kitchen/bath instantly
- Consistent finish throughout unit
- Cost: $3-8 per handle, $50-200 total
7. Front door and entry
- First impression matters
- Fresh paint, new hardware, clean mat
- Cost: $50-150
8. Landscaping/curb appeal
- Mow, edge, weed
- Fresh mulch in beds
- Trim overgrown shrubs
- Cost: $100-300
9. Appliances
- Deep clean inside/out
- Replace if non-functional
- Match (all white or all stainless)
- Cost: $0-1,500 if replacing
10. Odor removal
- Carpet cleaning or replacement if pet odors
- Odor-sealing primer on walls/subfloors if needed
- Ozone treatment if persistent
- Cost: $100-500
Room-by-Room Checklist
Kitchen:
- Deep clean inside all cabinets and drawers
- Clean/replace cabinet hardware
- Caulk countertops and backsplash
- Clean or replace appliances (inside and out)
- Replace any burned-out lights
- Touch up or repaint walls and cabinets
- Deep clean or replace flooring
- Check and repair any plumbing leaks
- Clean light fixtures and ceiling fan
- Replace GFCI outlets if aged or damaged
Bathrooms:
- Re-caulk tub, shower, sink
- Clean or replace grout
- Deep clean tile and fixtures
- Replace toilet seat (every turnover)
- Check for leaks (faucets, toilet, shower valve)
- Replace shower curtain and rod if damaged
- Touch up or repaint walls and trim
- Replace light bulbs and clean fixtures
- Check exhaust fan operation
- Clean or replace flooring
Bedrooms:
- Patch holes and cracks
- Touch up or repaint walls
- Clean or replace carpet
- Repair or replace closet doors/hardware
- Clean inside closets thoroughly
- Test all outlets
- Clean light fixtures and ceiling fans
- Clean/replace window blinds or treatments
Living Areas:
- Patch and paint walls
- Clean or replace flooring
- Clean all baseboards and trim
- Check and repair window operations
- Clean or replace window treatments
- Test all outlets and switches
- Clean/repair fireplace if applicable
Exterior:
- Mow, edge, weed yard
- Trim shrubs and trees
- Power wash siding, walkways, driveway
- Paint front door or touch up
- Replace exterior light bulbs
- Clean gutters
- Repair fence if damaged
- Check/repair mailbox
Systems and Safety:
- Replace HVAC filter
- Test HVAC system operation
- Replace smoke detector batteries (or full units if old)
- Replace carbon monoxide detector if expired
- Check water heater operation and temp (120°F)
- Test all GFCIs and reset if tripped
- Repair any plumbing leaks
- Fix any electrical issues
- Check locks on all doors and windows
Paint Strategy
When to paint:
- Walls: if more than 3-4 small patches needed, paint full room
- Trim: if chipped, worn, or not semi-gloss
- Doors: if damaged, stained, or wrong sheen
- Cabinets: if dated, damaged, or style doesn’t match
Paint colors for rentals:
- Neutral grays (Agreeable Gray, Repose Gray)
- Warm whites (Swiss Coffee, Dover White)
- Avoid: bold colors, all-white, beige/tan
Sheen strategy:
- Walls: eggshell (washable, hides imperfections)
- Trim, doors, cabinets: semi-gloss (durable, cleanable)
- Ceilings: flat white
Flooring Strategy
Carpet:
- Professional deep clean: $0.25-0.50/sq ft
- Replace if: stained, worn, pet odor, over 7-10 years old
- Cheap carpet for rentals: $1.50-3/sq ft installed
LVP (Luxury Vinyl Plank):
- Best rental flooring: durable, water-resistant, looks good
- Cost: $2-5/sq ft installed
- Install throughout (living, kitchen, bath, bedrooms)
- Longer lifespan than carpet
Tile:
- Keep if in good condition
- Regrout if stained
- Replace broken tiles
- Cost to replace: $8-15/sq ft
Hardwood:
- Refinish if worn: $3-5/sq ft
- Spot repair damage: $200-500
- Generally keep if solid
Appliance Strategy
Keep and clean if:
- Working properly
- Under 10 years old
- Clean appearance (no rust, dents, major stains)
Replace if:
- Not working
- Over 15 years old
- Rusty, dented, or very worn
- Mismatched set (all white or all stainless looks better)
Budget appliance sources:
- Scratch & dent outlets
- Used/refurbished from reputable dealers
- Basic models (don’t need fancy features for rentals)
Quick Fixes That Matter
Door hardware:
- Consistent finish (all satin nickel or all oil-rubbed bronze)
- Replace broken or sticky locks
- Cost: $15-30 per door
Switch plates and outlets:
- Replace cracked or yellowed
- Use white or ivory (consistent throughout)
- Cost: $1-2 each
Closet rods:
- Repair sagging or broken rods
- Add shelving if missing
- Cost: $20-50 per closet
Caulk and grout:
- Bathroom and kitchen refresh
- Huge visual impact
- Cost: $5-10 per tube
Budget Planning
Light turnover (paint, clean, minor fixes):
- Cost: $1,000-2,500
- Timeline: 5-7 days
Standard turnover (paint, flooring, fixtures):
- Cost: $3,000-7,000
- Timeline: 10-14 days
Heavy turnover (major repairs, updates):
- Cost: $8,000-15,000+
- Timeline: 3-4 weeks
ROI consideration:
- Can you raise rent to justify cost?
- Will updates reduce vacancy time?
- Is it cheaper to refresh vs. keep looking “tired”?
When to Upgrade vs. Maintain
Upgrade if:
- You can raise rent $100+ per month
- Property is in good rental market
- Upgrades pay back within 2-3 years
- Competing units are nicer
Just maintain if:
- Market rent is capped (C-class area)
- Planning to sell soon
- Property is cash-flowing well as-is
- Upgrades won’t attract better tenants
Vendor Coordination
Efficient turnover requires:
- Painter (or handyman)
- Cleaner (deep clean specialist)
- Flooring installer (if replacing)
- Handyman for punch list
- Landscaper
Schedule overlap when possible:
- Flooring before painting (protects new floors)
- Painting before deep clean
- Deep clean last (before photos)
Marketing and Photos
Take photos after turnover:
- Clean, bright, staged (minimal furniture if possible)
- Natural light, wide angles
- Every room plus exterior
Listing description highlights:
- “Freshly painted”
- “New flooring”
- “Updated fixtures”
- “Professional deep clean”
- “Move-in ready”
Preventing Damage Next Time
Lease clauses:
- Professional cleaning required at move-out
- No smoking indoors
- Pet deposit and restrictions
- Maintenance reporting requirements
Regular inspections:
- Annual walk-through to catch issues early
- Photo documentation
- Address deferred maintenance proactively
Quality tenant screening:
- Better tenants = less turnover damage
- Worth spending time on screening
Quick response to maintenance:
- Small leaks become big damage if ignored
- Tenants report issues if you respond fast
Rental turnovers are a race between speed and quality. Focus on high-impact fixes (paint, flooring, deep clean), address all functional issues, and make units photo-ready. Budget smartly, coordinate vendors efficiently, and get units back on market fast. Every day vacant is money lost—plan turnover like the business decision it is.
Need help planning the next step?
Share photos and rough measurements to get a clear yes/no on fit and the right follow-up.