Well, I would not co-sign an apartment for a friend. Sorry. I have seen advertisements for co-signing services in my city, but I don’t know how they work.
The apartment place said they would accept their tax form from the previous year. But this is a LOT of information for them to have about someone and doesn't seem that practical for proving insurance.
I agree. It's not up to OP to pay for this or co-sign it. If OP's daughter wants to be grown and live with her boyfriend, they will need to find out how to do that without help, otherwise, she can move with OP.
Your options are to find someone who can co-sign, try to explain to this management company that you don’t have a co-signer and see what their response is, or try to rent from a smaller local.
I believe there are online services where you can get people to co-sign for you for a fee. Not too sure how they work, but it’s something you could Google.
Now, i've been doing some research and apparently many of these apartment complexes are run my corporate landlords that automatically deny applications from felons. My question is: will having a.
Around colleges they charge a bit more, but expect applicants to have no credit, co-sign, and destroy the place so they charge high, have contracts/lawyers with teeth, and usually have higher deposits.
Consider asking r/personalfinance for suggestions on how to persuade the apartment management to accept your own investments as collateral instead of having a parent co-sign.
