How to Screen Tenants: 10-Step Guide for Landlords & PMs (2026)
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One bad tenant can cost you $5,000-$30,000+ in lost rent, property damage, legal fees, and turnover costs. The only reliable way to avoid this? A thorough, consistent screening process.
This guide walks you through the complete tenant screening process in 10 steps โ from the initial rental application to the final decision. Whether you're a landlord screening your first tenant or a property manager building a scalable process, these steps will protect your properties and your bottom line.
Before You Start: Set Your Screening Criteria
Before you screen anyone, write down your minimum qualification criteria. This is critical for two reasons: it ensures consistency, and it protects you from Fair Housing complaints.
Common minimum criteria include:
| Criteria | Typical Standard |
|---|---|
| Monthly income | 3x monthly rent (gross) |
| Credit score | 620+ (some accept 580+ with conditions) |
| Rental history | 2+ years with positive references |
| Criminal background | No violent felonies (individualized assessment required) |
| Eviction history | No evictions in past 5 years |
| Employment | Verifiable current employment or income |
Apply these criteria equally to every applicant. No exceptions, no "gut feelings," no bending the rules for someone who seems nice. Consistency is both your legal shield and your best protection against bad tenants.
Step 1: Pre-Screen by Phone or Email
Before scheduling a showing, ask a few qualifying questions to save everyone's time:
- When are you looking to move in?
- How many people will be living in the unit?
- Do you have pets? (if applicable)
- What is your approximate monthly income?
- Have you ever been evicted or broken a lease?
- Are you willing to undergo a credit and background check?
This 5-minute conversation can eliminate 30-40% of unqualified applicants before you invest time in showings.
Step 2: Collect a Written Application
Use a standardized rental application that collects:
- Full legal name, date of birth, SSN (for credit/background checks)
- Current and previous addresses (past 3-5 years) with landlord contact info
- Current employer, position, income, and supervisor contact
- Additional income sources
- Personal and professional references
- Vehicle information (if applicable)
- Pet information (if applicable)
- Authorization to run credit and background checks
Charge an application fee ($25-$75, depending on your state's limits) to cover screening costs and ensure applicants are serious. Some states cap application fees โ check your local laws.
Step 3: Run a Credit Check
A credit report reveals how an applicant manages financial obligations. You need their written authorization (included in the application) to pull credit.
What to look for:
- Credit score: 700+ is excellent, 620-699 is acceptable, below 620 warrants closer examination
- Payment history: Look for patterns of late payments, especially on housing-related accounts (mortgage, previous rent)
- Outstanding collections: Multiple collections accounts suggest financial distress
- Debt-to-income ratio: High existing debt means less capacity to pay rent
- Bankruptcies: Chapter 7 filed within 2 years is a concern; older bankruptcies with clean recent history may be acceptable
Screening services: TransUnion SmartMove ($25-$40/report), MyRental ($30-$35), RentPrep ($21-$38). Most property management software includes integrated screening.
๐ก A low credit score alone doesn't make someone a bad tenant. Look at the full picture โ someone with a 590 score due to medical bills but perfect rent payment history may be a better tenant than someone with a 720 score who has two broken leases.
Step 4: Run a Background Check
A criminal background check searches county, state, and federal records for criminal history. This is where you need to be especially careful about Fair Housing compliance (more on that below).
What you'll see:
- Felony convictions
- Misdemeanor convictions
- Sex offender registry status
- Pending criminal cases
What you should NOT use as automatic disqualifiers:
- Arrests without convictions (an arrest is not proof of guilt)
- Blanket "no felonies ever" policies (HUD guidance requires individualized assessment)
- Minor, non-violent offenses from many years ago
Step 5: Check Eviction History
An eviction search reveals past eviction filings and judgments. This is arguably the most predictive single factor โ a tenant with a prior eviction is significantly more likely to require eviction again.
What to look for:
- Any eviction judgment within the past 5-7 years is a serious red flag
- Multiple eviction filings (even if dismissed) suggest a pattern
- An eviction from 8+ years ago with clean history since may be excusable
Note: Eviction records are increasingly being sealed or limited in some jurisdictions. Know your state laws.
Step 6: Verify Income and Employment
The standard rule is 3x monthly rent in gross income. For a $1,500/month apartment, that's $4,500/month or $54,000/year.
How to verify:
- Pay stubs: Request the last 2-3 months. Watch for consistency.
- Employment verification: Call the employer directly (use the company's main number, not a number the applicant provides). Confirm title, tenure, and income.
- Tax returns: For self-employed applicants, request the last 2 years of tax returns.
- Bank statements: For applicants with non-traditional income (investments, alimony, retirement), request 3 months of bank statements showing consistent deposits.
- Offer letter: For applicants relocating for a new job, an offer letter with salary is acceptable alongside other verification.
๐ก Watch for fake pay stubs โ they're increasingly common. Red flags: round numbers (exactly $5,000 vs. $4,987.23), inconsistent fonts, missing employer details, year-to-date totals that don't add up.
Step 7: Contact Previous Landlords
This is the step most landlords skip โ and it's the one that would have saved them the most grief. Always call at least the last two landlords.
Questions to ask:
- Can you confirm [name] was a tenant from [date] to [date]?
- Did they pay rent on time?
- Was there any property damage beyond normal wear and tear?
- Were there any lease violations or complaints from neighbors?
- Did they give proper notice before moving out?
- Would you rent to them again?
Why two landlords? The current landlord may give a glowing reference just to get rid of a problem tenant. The landlord before that has no incentive to lie.
If a landlord is unresponsive after 2-3 attempts, that's a data point too โ it may mean the "landlord" was actually a friend or family member, or the applicant lived somewhere they don't want you to know about.
Step 8: Check Personal References
Personal references are the least valuable screening step (nobody provides a reference who'll say something bad), but they can occasionally reveal useful information:
- How long have they known the applicant?
- What is their relationship?
- Would they feel comfortable having the applicant as a neighbor?
Professional references (supervisor, coworker) are more valuable than personal friends. If someone can't provide any references at all, that's notable.
Step 9: Meet the Applicant
While you can't make decisions based on protected characteristics, meeting an applicant during a showing provides legitimate insights:
- Did they show up on time?
- How did they treat the property during the viewing?
- Did they ask thoughtful questions about the lease terms, maintenance procedures, and neighborhood?
- Were they forthcoming about their situation, or evasive?
Some applicants will reveal red flags voluntarily: "My last landlord was terrible โ they kept my deposit for no reason" (translation: there was probably damage). Listen carefully.
Step 10: Make Your Decision and Document It
Review all collected information against your pre-established criteria. Your decision should be one of three outcomes:
- Approved: Applicant meets all criteria. Move to lease signing.
- Conditionally approved: Applicant meets most criteria but has one concern (e.g., slightly low credit score). Offer with conditions โ higher deposit, co-signer, or shorter initial lease term.
- Denied: Applicant doesn't meet your stated criteria. Send an adverse action notice (required by the Fair Credit Reporting Act).
Adverse action notice requirements:
- Must be provided when you deny based on credit report information
- Include the name of the screening company used
- Inform the applicant of their right to dispute information and obtain a free copy of their report within 60 days
- State the reason for denial
Fair Housing Compliance โ Non-Negotiable
๐ Critical compliance section
The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination based on seven protected classes:
- Race
- Color
- National origin
- Religion
- Sex (includes gender identity and sexual orientation per 2021 HUD guidance)
- Familial status (families with children, pregnant women)
- Disability
Many states and cities add additional protections: source of income (Section 8 vouchers), age, marital status, student status, veteran status, immigration status, and more. Know your local laws.
Criminal Background Screening and Fair Housing
HUD's 2016 guidance (still in effect) states that blanket criminal history bans can violate Fair Housing because they disproportionately impact certain racial groups. Best practices:
- Do individualized assessments. Consider the nature and severity of the crime, how long ago it occurred, and what the applicant has done since.
- Never deny based on arrest records alone โ only convictions.
- Don't ask about criminal history on the application in jurisdictions with "ban the box" laws.
- Document your reasoning for any denial based on criminal history.
- Ensure your policy has a legitimate business justification โ protecting property and tenant safety qualifies; general discomfort with criminal records does not.
Red Flags That Should Concern You
- ๐ฉ Urgency to move in immediately with no apparent reason
- ๐ฉ Offering to pay several months upfront in cash (may be trying to skip screening)
- ๐ฉ Unable or unwilling to provide previous landlord contacts
- ๐ฉ Inconsistencies between application and documents (different employer names, income amounts)
- ๐ฉ Gaps in rental history with no explanation
- ๐ฉ Pressuring you to skip or rush the screening process
- ๐ฉ Negative or hostile comments about all previous landlords
- ๐ฉ Unwilling to allow a credit or background check
Screening Costs and Who Pays
| Screening Component | Typical Cost | Who Pays |
|---|---|---|
| Credit report | $15 โ $25 | Applicant (via application fee) |
| Background check | $10 โ $20 | Applicant (via application fee) |
| Eviction search | $5 โ $15 | Applicant (via application fee) |
| Income verification | Free (your time) | Landlord/PM |
| Reference calls | Free (your time) | Landlord/PM |
| Total per applicant | $30 โ $60 |
Most landlords and PMs charge a non-refundable application fee of $35-$75 to cover screening costs. Some states limit how much you can charge โ California caps it at $62.02 (2026), New York caps it at $20.
Building a Scalable Screening Process
For property managers handling multiple applications per week, efficiency matters:
- Use online applications. Buildium, AppFolio, TenantCloud, and other PM software platforms include built-in application and screening workflows.
- Automate screening orders. When an application is submitted, screening should trigger automatically.
- Create a scoring rubric. Assign points for each criteria met โ this speeds up decisions and ensures consistency.
- Template your communications. Pre-write your approval emails, conditional approval letters, and adverse action notices.
- Process in FIFO order. First qualified applicant gets the unit. This is the fairest approach and reduces Fair Housing risk.
Streamline your tenant screening process
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