How to Screen Tenants as a First Time Landlord

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  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
  • Chris at Hauseit (www.hauseit.com) goes over how to screen tenants as a first time landlord, what some best practices are, and what the easiest and most common steps landlords can take to screen and vet potential tenants for their properties. Save money when you buy a home in NY or FL: www.hauseit.co...
    Save money when buying, selling and renting real estate in New York and Florida with Hauseit (www.hauseit.com). Available in NYC, Long Island, the Hudson Valley and South Florida. Established 2014.
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    Screening tenants as a first time landlord is much easier these days with advances in non-intrusive credit checks directly via any of the major credit rating agencies, such as TransUnion SmartMove. In contrast, in prior ages one had to contact a middleman credit check agency who might charge a hefty fee to run a hard credit check on the tenant. This would necessitate finding out sensitive personal information about the tenant such as the tenant's social security number. As you can imagine, this might cause discomfort with many tenants, or at least hesitation.
    Instead, you can use a credit check product with any of the major credit rating agencies, and they can share the tenant's credit report and other background information with you directly upon receiving permission from the tenant. You'll only need the tenant's name and email address, and after setting up your property on the credit check site, you can simply invite the tenant to apply. The tenant will then verify their identity directly with the credit rating agency, without revealing their social security number to you, and once verified, the credit rating agency will share their credit report with you.
    Keep in mind that you still are able to get their complete credit report, and often other types of background checks through this method. These checks often cost less than $50 to run, and can be paid by either party. Keep in mind some states prohibit checks on housing court records, such as New York. If so, services like TransUnion SmartMove simply won't show data for such prohibited searches for New Yorkers.
    Another important diligence item landlords must do is to check landlord references. It's super important to get a sense of who the prior 1-2 landlords for the tenant were, and to contact them for a reference check. Ideally it's more than just an email, and you're able to speak with them perhaps via a phone call to get a sense of the landlord's experience. Did the tenant always pay on time? Did they treat the property and landlord well? Did they cause any property damage? Were they excessively difficult?
    Another screening must-do for landlords is to check the tenant's income and/or assets. Obviously, a landlord must verify that the tenant has an ability to pay the rent, or otherwise has a guarantor who is able to. Be careful with this one as in some states like New York, "source-of-income" is a protected class. This is meant to protect people on housing vouchers from being discriminated against. In other states like Florida, there are no prohibitions on landlords verifying that the tenant has an ability to pay, and where they are sourcing that income.
    Lastly, you should try to meet the tenant, or at least do a phone or video-conference interview if state regulations permit. Many landlords trust their EQ and gut when it comes to vetting tenants, if nothing else but to get a sense of whether they're a nice, honest, trustworthy person. With that said, since this is subjective, you might not be able to do this in some states like New York where you might be liable for claims of discrimination because you met and saw them. Of course, these kind of claims are entirely subjective as well and is purely he says or she says. However, in order to protect yourself from potential liability in states like New York, it might be better to hold off on a direct interview request.
    Check out Hauseit's Rental Property Calculator to estimate your monthly/annual cash flow, cap rate and cash on cash returns: www.hauseit.co...
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    Save money when buying, selling and renting real estate in New York and Florida with Hauseit (www.hauseit.com). Available in NYC, Long Island, the Hudson Valley and South Florida. Established 2014.
    Hauseit LLC, Licensed Real Estate Broker
    Tel: +1 (888) 494-8258
    Email: team@hauseit.com
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    #hauseit #hauseitnyc #hauseitmiami #hauseitsouthflorida #hauseitlongisland #hauseithudsonvalley #hauseitwestchester #hauseitrealestate #hauseitre

КОМЕНТАРІ • 23

  • @searchbug
    @searchbug Рік тому +13

    Love these, Chris! Background check should be the PRIORITY of landlords. There are a lot of potential harm waiting for those who skip this part, especially for newbies in the industry. You would never want to rent your property to someone who has multiple eviction records, history of criminal records, and to someone who is in great debt. By doing this, you are protecting your cashflow, the other tenants from potential harm, and the community by ensuring that no unreported criminals are staying in your properties. We definitely don't want another Jeffrey Dahmer in the making.

    • @user-hz8bi3lj6v
      @user-hz8bi3lj6v Рік тому +2

      If you blanket ban everyone with a criminal record that is actually discrimination and you can get sued for that. If everything checks out with a tenant and you find a criminal history that’s old on they’re background check and you act like a scumbag about it best belief you can get sued depending on where your located.

    • @aao449
      @aao449 Рік тому

      @@user-hz8bi3lj6v- Sued by rejected criminal vs sued by tenant who was victimized by criminal tenant?🤔

    • @raygordonteacheschess5501
      @raygordonteacheschess5501 11 місяців тому

      You also never want to admit to breaking the law, but many landlords do.

    • @raygordonteacheschess5501
      @raygordonteacheschess5501 11 місяців тому

      So you want to pay 100k to a lawyer over a five-minute e-mail? Yeah that's smart.

  • @positivechic1463
    @positivechic1463 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for posting, I am renovating a house and looking to rent it out to anyone not family so I wanted pointers

  • @crand20033
    @crand20033 Рік тому +3

    Transunion is not used in North Carolina. Only Equifax or Experian is reported to in North Carolina. So using "Smart Move" will not be helpful to a landlord. Also, you must have a social Social Security number which is something I never ask for.

  • @deweywolff5581
    @deweywolff5581 6 місяців тому

    Great Information!!!
    Thanks

  • @m2kaay
    @m2kaay Рік тому

    Omg Chris is GORGEOUS 🤩🤩🤩

  • @dav6637
    @dav6637 Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @yellowberrypie
    @yellowberrypie 5 місяців тому

    Good stuff, thanks. Should landlords care about balance on a bam statement if a applicant provided that as source of income or is credit score and stable job more important?

  • @LetArtsLive
    @LetArtsLive 6 місяців тому

    So I'm out I'm on Section 8 I'm below poverty level and I'm only a bad tenant if I ask to have something fixed how do you screen for bad landlords?

  • @Lidu12004
    @Lidu12004 2 роки тому +5

    What about could be tenants screening a potential landlord. Would be good to know if the landlord is not a slum or scum landlord before making a commitment to rent from that person. It go both ways, if potential tenants need to provide 2-3 references and have good rental history and high credit scores then they should at least be able to also screen the potential landlord.

    • @a.humanrightsactivist
      @a.humanrightsactivist Рік тому +3

      These days more rentals are listed on various websites such as Yelp or AirBNB or Zillow where users can post reviews. I agree. Scummy landlords should have a registry. 🗞️

    • @markkory8059
      @markkory8059 Рік тому +1

      I wonder if there are slum landlords. Housing regulation controls that. If the house isn't up to par, its probably because the landlord doesn't screen the tenants. The tenant damages the property and the landlord is stuck.

    • @aao449
      @aao449 Рік тому

      All of you are correct!👍

    • @makemagamad3370
      @makemagamad3370 11 місяців тому +2

      The tenant has a choice not to rent from a landlord. The landlord has no choice not to take a tenant application.

    • @Suzeaphone
      @Suzeaphone 8 місяців тому +2

      If requested, I would give applicants my references, however it wouldn’t be high on my list and would probably mean selecting another qualified applicant.

  • @honeywell-b7p
    @honeywell-b7p 3 місяці тому

    Never give your social insurance number to anyone.