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Apartment owner Greystar is being sued over allegations of hidden fees and intentionally misleading tenants about rent costs by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser and the Federal Trade Commission.
Thursday, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser announced he filed a lawsuit in Denver federal district court against apartment landlord, Greystar.
In their complaint, Colorado and the FTC say hidden fees on rental properties have cost tenants living in Greystar properties upwards of hundreds of millions of dollars since at least 2019. Tenants ...
Greystar manages more than 800,000 rental units nationally, from student housing to apartment towers and senior residential units. The company rejected the accusations made by the FTC and Weiser ...
Greystar unlawfully charged military personnel with relocation orders for early lease terminations, the DOJ said.
“Because of Greystar’s deceptive advertising and hidden fees, tenants are on the hook in their lease for hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars more than they anticipated that their apartment ...
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the State of Colorado have filed a complaint against Greystar, a multi-family rental property manager, alleging that it deceived consumers about rental costs ...
Between summer 2019 and summer 2022, on property owners’ behalf, Greystar collected more than $100 million in hidden fees from tenants at properties it managed in California, Colorado, Nevada ...
Greystar pushes back against allegations over base rent practice. In response to the FTC and Colorado lawsuit, Greystar vigorously pushed back against the allegations, calling the complaint a ...
Colorado attorney general accuses Greystar of deceptive ads, hidden rental fees in new lawsuit by: Morgan Whitley. Posted: Jan 16, 2025 / 01:26 PM MST. Updated: Jan 16, 2025 / 01:26 PM MST.