Understanding California Tenant Screening Laws
Tenant screenings aren’t expensive or time-consuming, and the wealth of information they provide is invaluable. Here’s what you need to know about California tenant screening laws before utilizing them to find the best qualified applicants.
As a property owner or manager, a large part of your success depends on finding good, reliable tenants. While there are no guarantees, screening prospective tenants will help you determine if they are likely to pay their rent on time, take care of your property and not cause problems. It’s an important step that can help guard against those tenants who cause time-consuming and costly headaches.
This type of screening background check includes a check of a potential tenant’s credit history, which will help you weed out tenants who have a history of not paying their rent on time or at all. This also can reveal if a tenant has a low credit score because of problems they’ve since resolved.
You’ll also be able to run a check of the renter’s criminal history, which is particularly important. In some cases, tenants try to use rental properties to conduct criminal activities. These tenants can ruin your good reputation as a property owner or manager, bring violence into your community and even endanger other residents.
In addition, tenant screenings may provide you with important legal protections. If one tenant commits a crime against another, a clean background check on the aggressor will help illustrate that you couldn’t have predicted these actions.
Screenings can also help in case you’re accused of discriminatory leasing practices. Tenants are protected by a national law called the Fair Housing Act, and California’s State law is even more extensive than the Fair Housing Act. If you declined to rent to a prospective tenant because of legitimate issues revealed in a background check, this can help defend you against unwarranted accusations of discriminating against renters due to their race, sexual orientation, religion, gender, etc.
Here is what you need to know:
You can pass the cost of screenings along to applicants.
In California, you can include the cost of tenant screenings along with the application fee. The cost you pass along to the tenant can include the actual cost of the screening as well as the cost of your time, which must be a reasonable value. Application fee caps can rise annually based on the Consumer Price Index and are just over $50.
However, you can’t profit from screening fees.
Although you can require prospective tenants to bear the cost of their screenings, you can’t make a profit from these fees. You’ll need to provide your tenant with a written receipt after they pay the fee and must itemize all costs. If the report and the value of your time is less than what you charged the prospective tenant, the difference must be returned to the tenant. And if you don’t run a background check at all, this portion of the application fees must be returned to the tenant.
Credit reports.
If you obtain a tenant’s credit report as part of the screening process, they’re entitled to a copy of it if they ask for it. Additionally, a prospective tenant can order that a freeze be put on their credit so it can’t be accessed by third parties without the tenant’s consent. It’s reasonable to expect that your renter will suspend the freeze long enough for you to check their credit report or to give consent for this information to be released to you. If they don’t, you can legally deny their application.
Conclusion.
Tenant screenings are a valuable tool to help you weed out potential problem tenants and rent to those who are more likely to be reliable, problem-free renters. But to conduct tenant screenings in the state of California, you must be aware of and adhere to the California tenant screening laws that govern these very valuable checks.
RentSpree is the preferred, online tenant screening provider of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles. With it, you can put together a completed application package in one simple step. This includes a completed rental application, credit report and score, criminal background check, and national eviction history. RentSpree can handle the entire screening process for you and it takes just two minutes to start screening! Better yet, you can receive all reports back instantly at the property or at another time of your choosing. Visit https://aagla.rentspree.com to learn more.
Picture screening your rental applicants without sifting through stacks of forms, making 3 – 5 phone calls, and waiting 2 – 3 days for their screening reports. RentSpree gives landlords peace of mind by automating the rental application process. When showing or marketing your property, simply provide each applicant with a LeaseLink™ and they can complete the entire process from a computer or smartphone. Reports generate instantaneously and include a rental application, credit score, background check, and eviction report. Rent your properties quickly and safely and ensure you make the most informed decision with our customized, intuitive software. Visit https://aagla.rentspree.com to request your demo today! You can also call us Monday through Friday, 9 AM – 5PM PST, at 323-515-7757.