JourneyCareersProperty Manager
Global Career Guide (EN)From Property & Housing β†’

Property Manager

AI

A property manager looks after rented properties on behalf of landlords - finding tenants, collecting rent, arranging repairs and handling issues. It suits organised, people-facing people who can juggle many tasks and stay calm when problems crop up.

The role

What a property manager actually does, day to day.

The work is advertising and letting properties, vetting tenants, collecting rent, organising maintenance, carrying out inspections and dealing with disputes and emergencies. Organisation, good communication and problem-solving matter, since you balance the needs of landlords and tenants and must keep on top of legal and safety duties.

It is a mix of office work and visiting properties, usually weekday hours with some flexibility for viewings or emergencies, and pay is a steady salary that grows with experience. The work can be stressful when repairs, complaints or difficult tenants pile up, but it is varied and people-focused.

You can get in without a degree, often starting in estate or letting agency and learning on the job, sometimes through an apprenticeship. Industry qualifications in property or lettings help, and you must know the housing and safety laws that apply.

A typical week

Day to day

1Advertise and let properties
2Vet tenants and arrange tenancies
3Collect rent and chase arrears
4Organise repairs and maintenance
5Carry out property inspections
6Handle tenant and landlord queries
7Keep records and follow housing law