Your Ohio City tenants call at 2 AM. We answer, dispatch a vendor from your list, and send you the report by morning. You never miss a call from West 25th to Lorain Ave.
Get Started — $395/mo flat feeOhio City is one of Cleveland's hottest rental markets. Investors from Columbus, Akron, and out of state are buying up multifamily properties near the West Side Market, Detroit Shoreway corridor, and the Lorain Avenue strip. High demand, rising rents, and premium tenants.
But the buildings are old. Victorian-era plumbing. Boilers from the '70s. Knob-and-tube wiring behind fresh drywall. When something breaks at 2 AM—and it will—your tenant expects an answer in minutes, not hours. Ohio City renters are paying $1,200+ and they know their rights.
If you're managing from out of state, or juggling a day job alongside your portfolio, you need someone answering those calls. That's what RentOpsCLE does.
Pre-war Ohio City homes run on aging boilers. January failures are emergencies—especially in units with infants or elderly tenants.
Galvanized pipes in 1890s–1920s builds. Freeze-thaw cycles crack joints. One burst pipe can damage three units in a multifamily.
Older panels and mixed wiring are common near W 25th. Tripped breakers at midnight are a nuisance; arcing wires are an emergency.
Street-level units near Market District see higher lockout volume. After-hours locksmith dispatch keeps tenants safe and off your phone.
Tank-style heaters in Ohio City basements fail without warning. Tenants discover it at shower time. We handle the call and the vendor.
Flat roofs on Ohio City row houses collect water. Heavy rain means after-hours leak calls. Quick tarp and patch prevents ceiling damage.
We answer 24/7. Triage the issue. If it's a 2 AM boiler failure on W 28th, we know it's an emergency before you even wake up.
From your pre-approved vendor list. Local Cleveland contractors who know Ohio City buildings. No random Google results from another state.
One clean summary by morning. What happened, who was dispatched, cost, resolution. You read it with your coffee. No surprises.
Ohio City properties fall under Cleveland's Residents First ordinance and all city housing code requirements. Out-of-state investors often miss deadlines they didn't know existed. We track them for you.
RentOpsCLE charges a flat monthly fee starting at $395/month for Ohio City landlords — no percentage of rent, no hidden dispatch fees, no per-call charges. The fee covers unlimited after-hours tenant calls, vendor dispatch coordination, and morning reports for your Ohio City portfolio.
RentOpsCLE handles all after-hours maintenance calls for Ohio City properties — including boiler failures, burst pipes, electrical issues, lockouts, water heater replacements, and emergency roof repairs. We triage the call, dispatch your pre-approved Cleveland vendor list, and send you a full morning report with cost and resolution details.
No. RentOpsCLE is designed for Ohio City landlords managing from anywhere — Columbus, Akron, or out of state. We answer every after-hours call so you never miss a maintenance issue on your Ohio City buildings. You get the morning report, not the 2 AM phone call.
We answer every call immediately, 24/7, 365 days a year — including holidays. For urgent emergencies in Ohio City, we dispatch your designated vendor within minutes of the call. You receive a status report by 8 AM covering what happened, who was dispatched, and what it cost.
Southwest suburb bordering Brook Park, Parma, and Berea with ~15.5K residents and ~30-35% renter-occupied 1960s–1970s housing. I-71 corridor access and Southwest General Health Center drive workforce housing demand.
Historic neighborhood with premium tenants and high expectations. After-hours dispatch for Professor Ave to Lincoln Park properties.
Highest maintenance call volume on the West Side. Dense multifamily buildings from W 65th to W 117th along the Gordon Square corridor.
60%+ renter-occupied with heavy out-of-state investor ownership. University Circle proximity and 1920s-1940s building stock.
Cuyahoga County's densest inner-ring suburb. 60% renter-occupied with aging pre-war doubles and triples along Madison and Detroit Ave.
Cuyahoga County's largest suburb — ~80K residents, 1950s–1970s housing, and high out-of-state investor concentration with heavy maintenance demand.
East-side suburb along Lake Erie with ~47K residents, ~45% renter-occupied, and aging 1940s–1960s housing stock with high maintenance demand.
Compact southeast inner-ring suburb bordering Maple Heights and Garfield Heights. ~12,500 residents, ~40-45% renter-occupied 1940s–1960s housing stock with affordable $75K-$130K entry prices attracting out-of-state investors along the I-480 corridor.
Prestigious planned community with historic Tudor and Colonial architecture. Strict housing code enforcement and significant out-of-state investor presence.
Inner-ring suburb southeast of Cleveland with ~45% renter-occupied post-war housing. Affordable cap rates draw out-of-state investors who can’t be on-call at 2 AM.
50%+ renter-occupied — one of Cuyahoga County's highest renter ratios. 1950s–1960s post-war Cape Cods and ranches with high maintenance demand and out-of-state investor presence.
Inner-ring suburb east of Cleveland with ~40% renter-occupied housing. Student rental demand from Notre Dame College and John Carroll University drives maintenance volume year-round.
Compact inner-ring suburb with ~13K residents and 45–50% renter-occupied — one of the highest renter ratios in the eastern inner-ring suburbs. John Carroll University drives student rental demand and year-round tenant occupancy.
Inner-ring suburb southwest of Cleveland bordering Parma with ~20K residents and ~35-40% renter-occupied 1950s-1960s post-war housing. Cleveland Hopkins Airport proximity drives workforce housing demand.
Home to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport with ~18.5K residents and ~35-40% renter-occupied 1950s–1960s post-war housing. Airport, Ford plant, and NASA Glenn workforce drives stable tenant demand at $85K–$145K entry prices.
Southwest suburb bordering Brook Park and Middleburg Heights with ~18,900 residents and ~30-35% renter-occupied 1950s–1970s housing. Baldwin Wallace University drives student and faculty rental demand with affordable $130K–$200K entry prices.
Southwest outer-ring suburb bordering Parma, Broadview Heights, and Brecksville with ~30K residents and ~25-30% renter-occupied 1960s–1980s housing. Well-rated school district and I-77 corridor access drive family rental demand at $180K–$280K valuations.
Flat monthly fee. No percentage of rent. Month-to-month. Cancel anytime.
Get Started — $395/mo flat fee See How It Works