Most rental denials happen because of something the applicant didn't know was in their file. A dismissed eviction filing still showing in a screening database. A utility collections account from three years ago. An old charge that was expunged but didn't clear from every database. This is where applications get denied — not because of something you did wrong recently, but because of data you've never seen. Pull your own report before you pay a single application fee.

What's actually in a rental background check

Most rental screening reports pull from four categories. Not every landlord uses all of them — some run a simple credit check, while large management companies pull comprehensive reports that include everything below. You need to know what's in each one.

Free tool Know what landlords will see before they see it.

Use the RentReadyScore tool to estimate how your credit, eviction history, criminal background, and income stack up against typical screening criteria — and get ahead of any issues before you apply.

1. Credit history

This is usually the first thing a landlord looks at. Your credit report gets pulled from one or more of the major bureaus — Experian, TransUnion, or Equifax — and it shows:

  • Your credit score
  • Payment history on loans, credit cards, and accounts
  • Outstanding balances and credit utilization
  • Collections and charge-offs
  • Bankruptcies (visible for up to 10 years)
  • Recent hard inquiries

Medical debt is a moving target right now. Recent changes to credit reporting rules have reduced how much medical debt affects your score, but it can still appear on a full report. Don't assume it's invisible.

What landlords actually focus on: payment reliability, how much debt you're carrying, and whether there are active collections — especially utility or rent-related ones. Those are the categories that trigger denials most often. If your score is in a borderline range, see what credit score landlords typically look for before spending fees anywhere.

2. Eviction history

Here's the one that blindsides people the most. Eviction records don't come from your credit report — they come from specialized tenant screening databases. The most common ones are Experian RentBureau, CoreLogic SafeRent, and LexisNexis. Separate systems entirely.

An eviction check typically shows:

  • Formal eviction filings (even if they were dismissed)
  • Eviction judgments
  • Prior addresses and rental history in some cases

Some databases report the filing itself — not just whether you lost. A case that was dismissed, settled, or withdrawn can still show up. If you've got a prior eviction filing that resolved in your favor, you need to be ready to explain it proactively, ideally with documentation showing how it ended.

Eviction records typically stay visible for 7 years in tenant screening reports, but court records often stay longer. See the full breakdown in how long an eviction stays on your record — including state-specific rules and when records can be removed early.

3. Criminal history

A criminal background check searches county, state, and sometimes federal court records. What comes up depends on which databases the screening company accesses and how thorough the search is. The same person can get different results from two different companies — which is why knowing what's in your file matters before you apply.

Commonly reported items include:

  • Felony convictions
  • Misdemeanor convictions
  • Sex offender registry status
  • Pending charges in some cases

Arrests without convictions are legally restricted in many states — landlords can't use them as a basis for denial in certain jurisdictions. Expunged records shouldn't appear, though data errors happen more than they should. If you had something expunged, don't assume the databases caught up with that.

Lookback periods for criminal records are typically 7 years under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), but some states allow longer or shorter windows. Certain serious offenses may be treated differently depending on the jurisdiction.

Fair housing law also limits how landlords can use criminal history. HUD guidance on criminal records and housing says that blanket policies automatically rejecting anyone with a record can violate fair housing rules in some situations. The standard they push for is individualized assessment — looking at the nature of the offense, how serious it was, and how much time has passed. That's worth knowing if you have history and you're being screened.

4. Identity verification

Screening services verify you are who you say you are. They check your name, date of birth, and Social Security number against public records and databases to confirm identity and flag potential fraud.

This step catches mismatched information and flags cases where someone applied under a different name or identity. It's also where errors can pop up if your name is common or if there's been a reporting mistake tied to your SSN. Worth checking.

Know before you apply What will a landlord see in your background check?

Use the RentReadyScore approval tool to estimate how your credit, rental history, criminal background, and income stack up against typical landlord screening criteria — before paying another application fee.

Summary: what each component shows and for how long

Component What Is Reported Standard Lookback Notes
Credit historyScore, payment history, collections, bankruptcies7 years (10 for bankruptcy)FCRA governed
Eviction recordsFilings, judgments; some include dismissed cases7 yearsVaries by screening company
Criminal historyFelonies, misdemeanors, sex offender status7 years (federal); varies by stateArrests without conviction restricted in many states
Identity verificationName, SSN, address history matchN/A (point-in-time check)Flags fraud or mismatched info
Civil judgmentsMoney judgments from court proceedings7 yearsMay appear in background check, not always credit report

Lookback periods reflect federal FCRA maximums. State laws may restrict these further. Individual screening companies may report differently.

What's NOT in a standard background check

Here's what doesn't show up in a standard background check:

  • Bank account balances (landlords may request bank statements separately, but that's you providing them voluntarily)
  • Social media profiles
  • Medical records
  • Private messages or communications
  • Most traffic violations
  • Juvenile records in most cases

Employment history and income verification happen separately — through pay stubs, tax returns, or employer letters. That's not part of the background check itself.

The screening company the landlord uses changes what they see

This is something most people don't realize. The depth of a background check depends heavily on which service the landlord is using. Some run basic credit-only checks. Others use full tenant screening platforms that pull from multiple databases at once.

Common screening companies include TransUnion SmartMove, Experian Connect, RentSpree, Cozy, Buildium, and AppFolio. Each pulls from slightly different data sources and presents information differently.

Two landlords can run checks on the same person and get different results. That's why pulling your own report from multiple sources before you apply matters — you can't predict which company a landlord is using or what that specific database shows.

What this means for you

You can't control what's in your report — but you can control whether you know what's there before a landlord does. Any errors, outdated items, or dismissed cases you know nothing about are fixable before you apply. Unknown surprises are not.

Your rights as an applicant

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) gives you specific rights when a background check is used in a rental decision. Know these:

  • Landlords are required to notify you that a background check will be run
  • Written consent is required (usually through the application itself)
  • If you're denied based on the report, you're entitled to an adverse action notice identifying the screening company used
  • You can request a free copy of the report from the screening company within 60 days of the denial
  • You have the right to dispute inaccurate information

If something in your report is wrong, disputing it directly with the screening company is an option worth knowing about — especially if you know there's an error and you're planning to continue applying.

How background check rules vary by state

Federal law sets the floor through the FCRA, but states have layered on their own restrictions. Knowing your state's rules can make a real difference — some items in your history may not even be legally usable as a basis for denial where you're applying.

California

California has some of the strongest tenant-side protections in the country. Landlords can't use arrests without convictions as grounds for denial under state law. California's AB 1482 (the Tenant Protection Act) limits rent increases and restricts evictions in covered properties. California's source of income protections also prevent landlords in many jurisdictions from denying applicants who use housing vouchers or subsidies.

New York

New York City enacted the Fair Chance for Housing Act in 2024, which significantly limits when and how criminal history can be used in rental screening. NYC landlords generally can't consider most criminal records until a conditional offer has been made — and even then, they're limited in what they can use. New York State broadly prohibits discrimination based on source of income in housing applications too.

Texas

Texas has relatively few statewide restrictions on background check use beyond FCRA compliance. Landlords have broad discretion to set their own screening criteria, and there's no statewide source of income protection for housing vouchers. Some Texas cities including Austin have passed local fair housing ordinances, but if you've got background history and you're applying in a Texas market, your best move is targeting flexible independent landlords — state-level protections aren't going to carry you far.

Washington State

Washington has moved toward statewide restrictions on criminal history use in housing. Seattle landlords can't consider certain criminal records at all. Washington State also prohibits source of income discrimination statewide — landlords can't reject you solely because you're using a housing voucher. Washington's eviction protections also limit how COVID-era records can be used.

Colorado

Colorado enacted SB 21-173, which specifically restricts landlords from denying housing based on eviction filings that didn't result in a judgment. That's a big deal because many screening companies report all eviction filings including dismissed cases — and Colorado law limits how much weight landlords can give to a filing-only record. Colorado also has statewide source of income protections in housing.

Common situation

Most renters have never seen their own background check report.

It is common to apply to multiple apartments and keep getting denied without understanding why — until pulling a self-report reveals the issue. Pulling your own report before applying is the single most effective thing you can do to avoid an avoidable denial. It costs nothing and takes less than 20 minutes.

What you should do next

What you do next depends on what you know — or don't know — about your own screening file.

If you've never pulled your own report: Knowing what's in your file before a landlord sees it tends to change how you approach applications. Your free credit report is available at AnnualCreditReport.com. Tenant screening reports from TransUnion SmartMove, Experian RentBureau, or LexisNexis can be requested directly. County court records for eviction filings — even dismissed ones — may also be worth checking, since not all dismissed cases have cleared from every database.

If you found an error in your report: Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, screening companies are required to investigate disputes within 30 days and correct or remove information they can't verify. Addressing errors before applying further means the corrected information is what landlords see — not a dispute mid-application. Keeping documentation of the dispute outcome is useful if a landlord asks.

If you have a legitimate negative item (eviction, criminal history, old collections): Understanding exactly what's showing and preparing a response before applying tends to work better than discovering it mid-application. A letter of explanation that's factual and forward-looking — addressing what happened and what's different now — is something many renters include when applying to landlords who do manual reviews.

If you were denied and received an adverse action notice: That notice identifies which screening company was used. You're entitled to a free copy of the report from that company within 60 days. Reviewing it — and disputing anything that's inaccurate — before applying elsewhere is how you avoid the same denial at the next property.

Frequently asked questions

How far back does a rental background check go?

Criminal records can appear for 7 years in most states, though some states have shorter lookback periods. Eviction records typically show for 7 years. Credit history goes back 7 years for most negative items, and 10 years for bankruptcies.

Can a landlord see your bank account in a background check?

No. A standard background check does not include bank account access. Landlords may separately ask for bank statements as part of income verification, but that requires you to provide them voluntarily.

Will a dismissed eviction show up on a rental background check?

It depends on the screening service. Some databases show all filed eviction cases including dismissed ones. Others only show judgments. Proactively addressing a dismissed filing with a brief explanation is often the safest approach. In states like Colorado, landlords are legally limited in how they can use unfiled or dismissed eviction cases.

Can I run a background check on myself before applying?

Yes, and it is worth doing. Several major tenant screening companies allow consumers to request their own screening report. TransUnion SmartMove, Experian RentBureau, and LexisNexis offer consumer report request processes. Reviewing your own file tells you exactly what a landlord using that company will see — and gives you time to dispute errors before they affect an application. You can also pull your free credit report from each bureau via AnnualCreditReport.com and check court records in your county directly through your state's court lookup portal.

What if something on my background check is inaccurate?

Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, you have the right to dispute inaccurate information on any consumer report, including tenant screening reports. Contact the screening company directly with documentation of the error. They are required to investigate within 30 days and correct or delete information they cannot verify. If the dispute is not resolved satisfactorily, you can file a complaint with the CFPB or consult a housing attorney.

Do landlords see pending charges on a background check?

Pending charges — meaning arrests where no conviction has occurred — appear in some background checks depending on the screening company and data source used. However, many states restrict or prohibit landlords from using arrests without convictions as a basis for denial. If you have a pending charge, research your state's fair chance housing rules and be prepared to explain the situation if asked directly. Bringing documentation that the matter is unresolved, or that charges were later dismissed, can help contextualize what a landlord sees.