How Do I Reject an Applicant I Don’t Like?

by | Aug 12, 2013 | Tenant Screening

Q: How can I reject a prospective tenant based on the sixth sense I get when meeting the person and feeling that their character is not desirable to work with? –TVS Landlord

If you are getting a bad vibe from a prospect, chances are it’s legitimate.

Instinct or a “gut” sense clearly plays a role in screening tenants. The problem is that instinct alone is not the most efficient way to screen tenants, especially if it leaves you second-guessing whether you have the right to reject an applicant who you don’t like.

tenant screeningLandlords need a quick and effective way to sort through rental applications to find the best tenant, without having a property sit vacant for any longer than necessary. It’s important to adopt a tenant screening policy that you can easily apply to every applicant. This screening protocol will help you quickly clarify whether you should reject an applicant:

Identify your threshold criteria: someone who can afford the rent, will take care for the property, and won’t cause problems.

Prequalify the prospect on the telephone to determine if they have the income to afford the rent before you agree to meet.

Once you meet the prospect, check to see if your other criteria are met. Here, you have flagged that the tenant may be difficult to work with. If applicants come across as belligerent, combative, or demanding, they are going to cause extra work — and that’s a good enough reason to say “no thanks!”

Before rejecting a tenant on a subjective basis like personality, take a moment to reflect, and eliminate the possibility that the “bad feeling” you are getting is related to the rental process — this is someone who will cause headaches — and not a stereotypical view of the person’s characteristics like race, gender, religion, and so on.

Now, you can be confident that you are rejecting this applicant for a legitimate reason. Because the decision is based on personality, not credit, you do not owe any explanation to this individual as to why he is rejected.

By the way, it’s more likely that acting on a gut feeling will cause problems for the opposite reason: you get a good feeling about the applicant, so you decide to pass on running a tenant background check. That’s a dangerous move.

Trust your gut instinct, but always verify what a tenant tells you by running tenant screening reports and checking references.

This post is provided by Tenant Verification Service, Inc., helping landlords reduce the risks of renting with fraud prevention tools that include Tenant Screening, Tenant Background Checks, (U.S. and Canada), as well as Criminal Background Checks, and Eviction Reports (U.S. only).

Click Here to Receive Landlord Credit Reports.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this post in not intended to be construed as legal advice, nor should it be considered a substitute for obtaining individual legal counsel or consulting your local, state, federal or provincial tenancy laws.

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