Landlords use tenant screening reports to help make decisions on possible tenants. These reports may contain information from many sources including your rental history and credit reports.
When you apply to rent a home, many landlords use a tenant screening report to help decide whether to rent to you and how much to charge for your security deposit. A tenant screening report may consist of any or all of the following:
Credit reports
Rental history information including any eviction actions and lawsuits
Employment verification
Criminal history
Sex offender registries
National terrorist watchlist
A risk score or recommendation based on criteria selected by the landlord
Inaccurate or outdated information in your tenant screening or credit reports can significantly interfere with your ability to find housing. A landlord is required by federal law to let you know:
If a tenant screening report or credit report was used to deny you housing
Contact information for the company that made the report
Your right to dispute the information in the report and
Your right to a free copy of that report if you make the request within 60 days of when the landlord denies you housing.
Tenant screening reports are different than credit reports. A credit report is a statement that has information about your credit activity and current credit situation such as loan paying history and the status of your credit accounts.
If you require more information in this regard, we recommend that you read the following article, published by The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, (2021) What is a tenant screening report?
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