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The app that finally makes paying your rent easier

Paying your rent is never an enjoyable task, but there is a new app making it easier—at least from a technological perspective.

Enter Boston-based Rentdrop, designed to digitize payments between landlords and renters, with no transaction fees for either one. Rentdrop’s app allows tenants to pay rent from their mobile devices, set up recurring payments, split rent, and report rent paid to credit bureaus. Landlords can see rent payment status from a handy dashboard. And the app allows for roommates to split rent payments—no matter how the landlord wants to collect—and coordinates direct deposit into a landlord’s bank account.

Cofounder Remen Okoruwa recently shared more with Fortune about gaps in the rental market and skyrocketing rents amid inflation.

The following interview has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

Could you share a bit about your professional background before launching Rentdrop?

I began my career as a management consultant at McKinsey (2011 to 2013) and explored roles in asset management and sales before launching my first startup, a data analytics consulting firm that I ran from 2016 to 2018. I then joined HubSpot as a product manager in 2019. This was a turning point for me, as it was here that I learned the craft of product management, met my current co-founder Ben, and also built connections with many of the investors that helped us launch Rentdrop.

What inspired the launch of Rentdrop?

I spent several years dealing with the frustration of living with multiple roommates, yet my landlords expected a single check each month. Paper checks in the 21st century. Really.

To handle this, I mastered the end-of-month "Venmo Shuffle," sending Venmo payment requests and reminders to the roommates, depositing the funds into my bank account, waiting for funds to clear, then mailing the check and hoping it arrives by the first of the month. This process was time-consuming and stressful for me, so I wanted to build a better rent payment experience that makes sense for mobile-first renters.

Screenshot of Rentdrop app on iOS
Screenshot of Rentdrop app on iOS

On the surface, Rentdrop sounds quite a bit like Venmo. How is this app different from other digital payments apps on the market, and how will you get landlords (especially those who are notorious for still preferring paper checks dropped off each month) to adopt this method?

Rentdrop differs from payment apps like Venmo in several important ways:

1. Automation: We provide tools that landlords turn rent collection on autopilot. With Venmo, every month the landlord must manually request rent payments from all their tenants. And if those payments are late, then they must manually remind the renters to send the payment. For landlords with a portfolio of any reasonable size, this process is way too time consuming & doesn't scale. With Rentdrop, we capture all the payment details from the lease and then automatically send these requests & reminders each month to all the tenants.