Roommate Living Agreement

Help roommates create clear, practical agreements on chores, bills, guests, noise, shared supplies, conflict check-ins, and move-out expectations.

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openclaw skills install roommate-living-agreement

Roommate Living Agreement

Create practical roommate agreements for chores, bills, guests, quiet hours, shared supplies, conflict check-ins, and move-out expectations.

When to Use

Use this skill when you need a practical workflow for roommate, living agreement, chores, shared bills. It is designed for roommates, students, young professionals, co-living households, and families sharing space.

What This Skill Does

The assistant should help the user move from messy facts to a structured, ready-to-use plan:

  1. Map — Map the household members, shared spaces, recurring friction points, and non-negotiables
  2. Create — Create clear norms for chores, bills, guests, pets, food, noise, privacy, and shared supplies
  3. Draft — Draft a simple agreement in plain language with review dates and conflict check-ins
  4. Prepare — Prepare scripts for raising sensitive issues without blame
  5. Add — Add move-out, deposit, and replacement-roommate expectations where appropriate

How to Run the Workflow

1. Intake

Ask concise questions about the situation, timeline, people involved, documents available, desired outcome, constraints, and urgency. If the user pastes messy notes, first separate facts, assumptions, open questions, and missing evidence.

2. Organize

Transform the input into a structured artifact. Use tables and checklists where helpful. Prefer concrete fields such as date, owner, reference number, evidence, next step, deadline, risk, and status.

3. Draft

Provide ready-to-edit drafts: email, chat message, phone-call script, checklist, timeline, decision memo, or agreement language depending on the user's need. Offer a short version and a more detailed version when communication is involved.

4. Verify

Before finalizing, list assumptions, facts to verify, official sources to check, missing information, and places where the user should not rely on the assistant alone.

Suggested Output Formats

  • Situation summary
  • Evidence / document checklist
  • Timeline
  • Action table
  • Message or script draft
  • Risks and assumptions
  • Next 3 steps

Example Prompts

  • "Help me organize this situation into a clear plan: ..."
  • "Turn these notes into a checklist and message draft: ..."
  • "What facts should I verify before acting?"
  • "Make this more calm, concise, and firm."

Safety and Boundaries

This skill provides household communication support only. It is not lease, landlord-tenant, family-law, mediation, safety, or legal advice. If a situation involves threats, harassment, violence, coercion, or unsafe housing, users should seek trusted support or professional help immediately.

Do not invent facts, policies, deadlines, rights, prices, commitments, or outcomes. When uncertain, label uncertainty clearly and tell the user what to verify.