Tenant Screening

Key Takeaways:

  • Establishing Rental Criteria: Before collecting rental applications, it’s crucial for landlords to establish clear rental criteria. This includes requirements for credit scores, income levels, and background checks. Having this in place ensures a systematic approach to screening and selecting tenants.
  • Credit Score Considerations: When setting rental criteria, consider acceptable credit score ranges that reflect financial responsibility and stability. Typically, a range of 560 to 850 is recommended, with higher scores indicating better financial health.
  • Income Verification: Ensure that tenants’ income is at least two to three times the rent price. This ratio helps confirm that tenants can comfortably afford the rent. Verification of income through pay stubs and bank statements is essential to authenticate the source and amount of income.
  • Background and Eviction Checks: Utilizing a reputable third-party service, such as TransUnion, to conduct background and eviction checks is vital. This helps identify any potential red flags in a tenant’s past that might influence their tenancy.
  • Handling Multiple Applicants: When multiple applicants qualify based on the established criteria, the first qualified applicant to apply should be offered the rental. This first-come, first-served approach promotes fairness in the rental process.
  • Use of Co-Signers for Conditional Approvals: For applicants who nearly meet the criteria, landlords might consider conditional approvals with a co-signer to mitigate potential risks. It is important to also screen co-signers to ensure they are financially stable.
  • Rejection Procedures: If rejecting an applicant based on information obtained from a screening report, it is mandatory to comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act. This involves informing the applicant of their rights to obtain and dispute their credit report.
  • Screening Reports Compliance: Ensure that the information in tenant screening reports complies with local laws, as some regions may have restrictions on the type of information that can be included in these reports.
  • Setting the Stage for Lease Agreements: Once a tenant is selected, the next steps involve finalizing the lease agreement details, such as move-in dates and lease terms, to ensure a smooth transition for the tenant’s move-in.
  • These steps not only help in choosing the right tenant but also ensure that the process is compliant with legal standards, fair, and transparent.

Transcript

Seamus Nally:

I’m Seamus Nally, CEO of TurboTenant, joined today by Samantha, the Landlord Experience Specialist at TurboTenant, and she’s here to make me a better landlord. So Samantha, last time we talked, you taught me all about rental applications, and I now have a bunch of applications that contain contact information, rental history, job history, I even collected things like additional occupants as well as pets and those really important documents like pay stubs to actually verify the income. So what’s next?

Samantha Yadav:

You’ve established your rental criteria, right?

Seamus Nally:

No, I haven’t.

Samantha Yadav:

Okay, so your rental criteria or your screening qualifications are going to be the guidelines that you’re looking at when determining if a renter is qualified. It’s going to be looking at things like the credit score, the background, and eviction history as well.

Seamus Nally:

Gotcha. So I probably should have done that before I even collected applications.

Samantha Yadav:

That’s definitely the recommendation, yes. But it’s not too late because we haven’t run the screening reports yet. So you can establish your rental criteria, communicate that with your renters, and move forward with the screening process.

Seamus Nally:

Awesome. You mind giving me a couple of tips, like when I’m establishing my criteria, what sort of credit scores should I be looking for?

Samantha Yadav:

Credit scores start at 300, that’s what everybody starts with, the lowest you can get. We recommend that you would consider applicants that have a credit score between 560 and 850, which is the top of the credit score line.

Seamus Nally:

So the higher the number in that range, the better, likely meaning the individual is going to be more capable of paying rent?

Samantha Yadav:

Yes, so the credit score is assigned based on financial activity, including the age of accounts that are open, the available credit, and on-time versus late payments.

Seamus Nally:

What else from a financial standpoint should I be putting into my rental criteria?

Samantha Yadav:

You should also consider what your income-to-rent or debt-to-income ratio will be. A lot of landlords like to look at the rent-to-income ratio as 30 percent. Some landlords do two and a half to three times the rent to ensure their renter is qualified and can support those monthly payments.

Seamus Nally:

So, I’m going to repeat that back just to make sure I’m following. I should be making sure that an individual’s income is two to three times what the rent is for my property?

Samantha Yadav:

That’s correct. And it should be verifiable income, so those pay stubs, documents, the bank statements that you receive from your renters during the application.

Seamus Nally:

Okay, so I’m verifying that the company actually exists.

Samantha Yadav:

Yes, you can do this with a Google search, make sure that the address matches what’s on the pay stub or the documents. You can also make sure that on the pay stubs you’re seeing zeros and not O’s, and make sure that numbers aren’t perfectly rounded as it relates to deposits and deductions on the pay stub.

Seamus Nally:

Well, people will actually fake that income verification to get a property?

Samantha Yadav:

They will, and it takes about 20 minutes online and five dollars to get a fake pay stub made up for you. That’s pretty scary.

Seamus Nally:

Yeah. And you mentioned background and eviction history. Now, I said that in my rental criteria, but then how do I actually verify that information along with the credit information?

Samantha Yadav:

That’s going to come from a third-party provider, your screening report provider. At TurboTenant, we use TransUnion, and they’re going to provide you with a snapshot look and then a deeper dive into things like the credit, the background, and the eviction history.

Seamus Nally:

Once I collect the tenant screening, I look at that information and I compare it to my rental criteria. What happens if I have a couple, let’s say, that are applying to a property together? One of them meets my rental criteria, but the other doesn’t. What should I do?

Samantha Yadav:

These are things you should consider when establishing your rental criteria so you know how you’re going to handle it and you can treat all applicants the same.

Seamus Nally:

Okay. One of the things that a lot of landlords do is if one renter is fully qualified and the second renter is qualified except that their credit score is maybe a little lower, then the landlord will choose to approve them conditionally. That would be either with a higher security deposit or with a guarantor or co-signer on the lease.

Samantha Yadav:

Okay, so with a conditional approval, do I run a screening report on that co-signer as well?

Seamus Nally:

Yes, you want to make sure that you’re running a screening report on all applicants, which includes the guarantors or co-signers, and just consider that they could be financially liable for your investment. So you want to make sure that they have a good credit history, they have a history of on-time payments, and aren’t delinquent on several accounts, because they may need to support your investment.

Seamus Nally:

So I have to go back to them, and I should get an application and a screening report.

Samantha Yadav:

You got it, the same information collected from everybody.

Seamus Nally:

Well, I received the same info regardless of where my property is located, in the tenant screening report?

Samantha Yadav:

If you’re using a reputable source, they should only provide you with information you’re allowed to use for the screening report.

Seamus Nally:

For example, in the state of New York, if you’re a landlord, you will not receive an eviction report with your screening report to keep up with current laws.

Samantha Yadav:

Gotcha. So I’ll only receive what I can actually consider as a landlord?

Samantha Yadav:

That’s correct, yeah.

Seamus Nally:

All right, now I have a couple of screening reports. Right, if I want to reject a candidate because they don’t meet the rental criteria that I’ve set up, what do I do? How do I reject them?

Samantha Yadav:

You don’t have to give them a specific reason for rejecting the application. But if you are using information obtained from a screening report, you’re required to send them information about the Fair Credit Reporting Act. That’ll let them know how to obtain a copy of their screening report, how to dispute information on their screening report, and it also confirms that the decision that you made was based in full or in part on the information obtained from that report.

Seamus Nally:

What if I have a bunch of applicants that I’ve screened and they all meet the criteria? How do I select someone, and then what happens next?

Samantha Yadav:

If you’re looking at all your applicants and screening reports, and they’re all equally qualified, the next thing you should do is look at who applied first, who was the first qualified applicant that applied, and offer them the rental.

Seamus Nally:

So it’s first come, first served.

Samantha Yadav:

That’s exactly right. It is first come, first served. The first qualified applicant should be the applicant that gets the rental.

Seamus Nally:

I’ve got my applicants. I’m that much closer to having an actual tenant paying rent. How do I move someone in?

Samantha Yadav:

We’re going to work on a lease agreement. We’re going to make sure we get all the details about their move-in date and the length of their lease. And then we’re going to move into that process to get them moved in.

Seamus Nally:

Well, I’m going to need you to tell me a whole lot more about that, but we’ll save it for another time.

Samantha Yadav:

You got it. Thanks for talking to me today about screening a tenant and making me a better landlord. I’ve got some tenants to screen. Don’t mess this up.

Presenters

Seamus Nally
Seamus Nally
CEO
Samantha Yadav
Samantha Yadav