Submitted by inhalent-abuse t3_z38g2x in newhampshire
Hey folks. I've lived in the granite state for the better part of three years now & have been under a lease with the same private renter in my apartment building the whole time. The guy has been a great landlord and is very fair with me, however with the rising cost of living my rent payments and bills have increased significantly this last year and it has become to much to handle. I'm just getting back to work after a 2 month layoff and I'm struggling so badly to keep my bills paid that I have not been able to buy myself groceries for the entire month (I'm living on an old bag of white rice and various seasoning salts lol). My lease is up in May of 2023 (in 5 months) and I need to get out of this place immediately if I want to survive.
So my question is - has anybody been in a similar situation? Are there any things I should know before I call up the landlord and try to come to an agreement? Any experience you could lend would help me immensely. I know that there's no legal penalty for breaking a lease in NH but I'm sure there's a fee written somewhere in my contract (digital contract, page 404'd). Thanks for your time.
Inariele t1_ixmp8ky wrote
before you break your lease, try talking to your landlord. Also, keep in mind, it is extremely difficult to get an apartment right now and worst case scenario you are on the street during the winter.
Regarding food, don't be shy to go to a food bank:
Here is a list sorted by cities:
https://www.foodpantries.org/st/new_hampshire
also, all CAP agencies have food pantries.
Apply for FAP-EAP pick the the CAP agency of your county. EAP gives you a percentage-based reduction of the electric bill.
https://www.capnh.org/cap-lookup
And let your taxes actually work for you: apply for everything and see if anything sticks. Specifically you want EBT, SNAP
https://nheasy.nh.gov/#/