Rentec Direct Blog

Tenant Screening, The Importance of The Credit Report

A young 3D woman debt consumer works to build up her credit score rating report

Credit reports are available to both property management companies as well as private landlords and costs around ten dollars. The credit report gives insight into how well the tenant pays their bills. Credit scores are a very legitimate and important piece of information that will give you an idea as to whether or not your tenant can be counted on to pay the rent and if they have enough cash leftover after paying off debtors. A credit score under 600 used to disqualify an applicant but nowadays credit scores are looked upon with a little more leniency than they used to be. The economic downfall in 2008 has changed this criteria a bit. A closer look has to be taken at the credit report. Many people, people looking to rent homes in fact, had their homes foreclosed upon and their credit has taken a big hit. If a prospect has a squeaky clean track record other than the foreclosure or short sale I often will consider it as less of an infraction since it is so common and really something that was not an option to many homeowners who found themselves in a bad mortgage. Another item that I overlook is poor credit history due to medical bills. We all know that medical bills can be extraordinarily expensive and sometimes unavoidable. Some things on a credit report that I never overlook are when a prospect hasn’t paid their utility bills, if they have an eviction, or collections that are within the last 6 months.

It’s important to look at the credit report closely as it can really paint a very accurate picture of how the prospect handles money. Tracking down tenants to collect rent every month is not something that any landlord or property manager wants to do. A credit check shows you current and delinquent accounts, collections, monthly obligations, account balances, FICO credit score, and more.

My Rule of Thumb

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