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Landlords can legally set whatever criteria they want for tenants, as long as they are reasonably related to their business needs and don't violate antidiscrimination laws. Here's a breakdown of when a landlord can rightfully reject an applicant, as well as some red flags that might indicate bad faith on a landlord's part.
A landlord may legally reject an applicant for legitimate business reasons such as
A landlord can also refuse to rent to smokers or disallow pets because smokers (and pet owners) as a group are not protected by antidiscrimination laws. If a landlord's policy is no pets, no smoking, or some other legitimate lease or rental agreement term, the only hope for a tenant who doesn't qualify under these rules is to try to negotiate.
Finally, landlords can limit the number of occupants for health and safety or legitimate business reasons. For example, if a rental's septic system can handle only four residents, the landlord would be on solid ground restricting the number of tenants to four. However, a landlord may not adopt a low occupancy standard for the purpose of prohibiting families, for example—this would be a violation of fair housing laws.
Why You Shouldn't Lie in Your Rental ApplicationYou are your own worst enemy if you lie on your rental application. Your landlord can easily find out that you don't make $100,000 per year by talking with your employer. Misrepresentations on the rental application are always legitimate grounds for rejection. And even if you slip by, ask yourself whether you want to rent from a landlord who is so careless. If the landlord didn't check up on you, they probably didn't check into any of your neighbors' applications, either.
The Federal Fair Housing Acts (42 U.S. Code §§ 3601-3619) prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation), age, familial status (having children), and physical or mental disability (including alcoholism and past drug addiction). In addition, many states and cities also prohibit discrimination based on marital status and source of income.
Most landlords will want you to fill out a rental application with information on your employment, income, credit and financial information, rental housing history, and possibly any criminal convictions. In most states, it's legal to ask for all this information and use it to make rental decisions (note that some states prohibit or restrict landlords' inquiries about criminal histories, though). Landlords may also legally ask you for your Social Security and driver's license numbers and (except in New York City, Colorado, and California) for proof of your legal residency in the United States. Landlords may even ask if you smoke or if you've ever been sued.
How far can landlords go? They can ask for any information that will:
Questions that don't relate to these two issues are probably not legal. Keep in mind, however, that not all discrimination is illegal, so some questions that don't not "sound right" might in fact be legal. (See "Can Landlords Ask About a Potential Tenant's Relationships" below.)
Look at it this way: When you rent a car, you're often asked for multiple forms of ID and your driving history. Renting a place to live isn't all that different: The landlord, as much as the car rental agency, needs to know whether you're a good risk and how to find you if things go awry. In fact, since rental property is a much bigger investment than a car, a landlord is motivated to be even pickier.
Money talks, especially in rental housing. If the landlord reasonably concludes that you can't afford to pay the rent in view of your income and existing debt level (which will be visible on your credit report), they are not obligated to rent to you. Many landlords use a rent-to-income ratio of one-to-three (rent can be no more than one-third of your income) as a rule of thumb.
As a broad generalization, you too probably don't want to spend more than 25% to 35% of your monthly take-home pay on rent, but this will obviously depend on your other expenses. And you won't want to live in a penthouse if it means you need to eat popcorn every night.
Most landlords don't care a bit about whom you share your bed with—they're much more interested in whether you pay your rent on time and are a decent housekeeper and a considerate neighbor. Unfortunately, a few landlords see themselves as enforcers of their chosen code of religion or morality. For example, some landlords don't want to rent to heterosexual unmarried couples, and some refuse to rent to homosexual couples.
Discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is illegal under federal fair housing laws. However, in many states, unmarried couples aren't protected by antidiscrimination laws, meaning landlords can get away with these kinds of choices. In these states, it wouldn't be illegal for a landlord to question you and your would-be roommate about the nature of your relationship (for example, by asking if you're "together").
If you and your friend are questioned concerning your relationship, what should you do? This is an issue for all roommates, even the ones who are just friends. Think about what this line of questioning bodes for future dealings with this landlord: Here is a businessperson who is inappropriately interested in customers' private lives. Chances are good that the landlord spends their time and energy checking up on tenants' love lives, at the expense of running a pleasant and livable building. If at all possible, look elsewhere.
While landlords are entitled to ask business-related questions on a rental application or during an interview, there is an important hitch: They should subject all applicants to the same set of basic questions. Because federal and state antidiscrimination laws make it illegal to single out members of certain groups for special treatment (such as questioning only people of a certain race or ethnic background), interview or application questions that aren't directed at everyone constitute an illegal practice.
For example, landlords who ask about immigration history should ask all tenants, not just those whom they suspect might be in the country illegally. Questioning only those from Asia would amount to illegal discrimination on the basis of national origin. Similarly, requiring credit reports from only Black applicants would also be considered illegal discrimination.
Do a little background investigation of your own. Conscientious landlords will probably take the time to learn about your rental and employment history. There's no reason why you, too, can't ask a few questions to find out whether you want to rent from this landlord.
Ask current tenants and neighbors what it's like to live there; if you can, ask the tenant whose unit you're considering why they're moving out. If the current tenant is leaving in disgust over poor management or dreadful neighbors whom the landlord won't evict, you'll want to think twice about signing a lease or rental agreement. Keep in mind that a building with a large turnover rate, and especially one where evictions are common, is probably not run very well.