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Tenant Screening Errors: Wrong Information on Your Rental Background Check

Housing is a necessity. When a tenant screening report contains errors — wrong eviction records, another person’s history, criminal records that belong to someone else — a landlord’s automated screening system can block your application before a human even reviews it. The result is denial of housing you qualify for, time lost, application fees forfeited, and in competitive rental markets, a cascading series of missed opportunities.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act covers tenant screening reports run by third-party companies. If a tenant screening agency reported inaccurate information and a landlord denied your application based on that information, you may have a legal claim.

Common Tenant Screening Errors

  • Eviction records that belong to a different person with a similar name
  • Eviction filings that did not result in an eviction still appearing as an eviction
  • Old eviction records outside the FCRA’s 7-year reporting limit
  • Criminal records that belong to someone else
  • Expunged criminal records still appearing
  • Incorrect credit information in a combined credit/background screening report
  • Wrong address history suggesting a pattern of instability

The Tenant Screening Industry: Automated and Error-Prone

Tenant screening has become a large, largely automated industry. Landlords subscribe to screening platforms — companies like Screening Reports, RentSpree, TransUnion SmartMove, Experian RentBureau, and others — that compile data from court records, credit files, and law enforcement databases and produce an automated recommendation (often “Approve,” “Conditional,” or “Decline”) within minutes.

These algorithms are as prone to error as any automated name-matching system. When they flag the wrong person, the landlord sees a “Decline” recommendation and moves on to the next applicant. By the time you have identified and disputed the error, the apartment may be rented.

Your FCRA Rights in Tenant Screening

  • Adverse action notice — if a landlord denies your application based on a tenant screening report, they must provide an adverse action notice identifying the screening company (FCRA § 1681m)
  • Right to your report — you can request a copy of your report from the screening company
  • Right to dispute — the screening company must investigate your dispute within 30 days (§ 1681i)
  • Right to sue — if inaccurate information was reported and not corrected after dispute, you may have an FCRA claim against the screening company

What to Do After a Rental Denial

  • 1. Ask the landlord for the adverse action notice — they should tell you which screening company they used
  • 2. Request your full report from the screening company
  • 3. Identify the errors and file a written dispute
  • 4. Request that the screening company update the record with the source court or agency if the error stems from a public record
  • 5. If errors persist, contact Schlanger Law Group

Damages Available

If a tenant screening company reported inaccurate information and failed to correct it after proper dispute:

  • Actual damages — application fees, moving costs, rent differential (if you had to rent a more expensive unit), temporary housing costs
  • Emotional distress damages for housing instability
  • Statutory damages of $100–$1,000 per willful violation (FCRA § 1681n)
  • Attorney’s fees paid by the defendant

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Does the FCRA apply to tenant screening reports?

A: Yes. Tenant screening reports prepared by third-party companies are “consumer reports” under the FCRA (15 U.S.C. § 1681a(d)), and the companies that compile them are “consumer reporting agencies” subject to FCRA requirements. The landlord also has adverse action notice obligations under § 1681m.

Q: What if the landlord just said my application was denied — no reason given?

A: If the landlord ran a screening report (which nearly all do), they have an obligation under FCRA § 1681m to provide an adverse action notice identifying the consumer reporting agency they used. Request the notice in writing. Their failure to provide it may be a separate FCRA violation.

Q: What if the eviction record is accurate but I have documentation showing the case was dismissed?

A: Dismissed eviction filings should generally not appear as evictions. If the screening report shows a filed case as a completed eviction (when it was dismissed), that is a factual error. Dispute it with the screening company and provide the court dismissal order.

Ready to Fight Back? Get a Free Consultation.

Schlanger Law Group represents consumers nationwide on a contingency basis — you pay nothing unless we win your case. Call (212) 500-6114 or fill out our contact form to schedule your free case review.