the new buyer must pay the arrearage on the home before moving in
Recent Examples on the WebThe GoFundMe was created with an initial goal of $20,000, to pay off the nearly $14,000 arrearage and put the extra funds toward some minor home repairs. Endia Fontanez, The Arizona Republic, 29 May 2022 Last month, the Chase Lloyd House Board of Trustees, which oversees the mansion, approved a $24,000 grant from its endowment to help pay off rent arrearage for women living in Annapolis public housing.Washington Post, 1 Dec. 2021 Money will come from a state water and wastewater arrearage payment program, administered by the California Water Resources Control Board, that will offer $985 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds to pay for the debt. Tammy Murga Reporter, San Diego Union-Tribune, 18 Oct. 2021 Of the 5,800 cases resolved with payment by UniteCT, the average arrearage was just over four months’ rent, indications that most applicants continued to pay some rent during the moratorium. Mark Pazniokas, courant.com, 2 Aug. 2021 Applicants were rejected for various reasons, Liu said, including not actually being past-due, providing no evidence that their arrearage was linked to COVID-19, or their landlord refused to provide supporting documentation. Ron Hurtibise, sun-sentinel.com, 18 May 2021 Except for rare instances when confidentiality is important (such as pending negotiations or member arrearage questions), questions regarding association money should be answered without hesitation.San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 June 2019 The landlord was excited the Latin American-themed restaurant opened in the building, but the restaurant accumulated a significant rent arrearage since their opening, Donnie Miller, assistant property manager at Waterside Place, said in an e-mail. Janelle Nanos, BostonGlobe.com, 8 May 2018 Bean said Dean didn't honor an agreement made between the garbage collector and his predecessor in which Brighton was to pay $5,000 a month on arrearage. Jonece Starr Dunigan, AL.com, 13 Oct. 2017 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English arrerage, arerage "unpaid debt, balance due, state of being behind in payment," borrowed from Anglo-French arrerage, from arere, arrerearrear + -age-age