18 Reasons to Reject a Tenant Application
Editorial note: This article was updated in April 2026 to improve fair-housing compliance and clarity. Screening rules can vary by state and city, so use written rental criteria, apply them consistently, and consult local counsel when needed.
18 Legal Reasons to Reject a Tenant Application

Can a landlord reject a rental application? Yes – but only for objective, legitimate, and consistently applied business reasons. If you use tenant screening reports, credit reports, criminal history, references, or income documents, your denial process also needs to comply with fair housing rules and, when applicable, adverse action notice requirements.
Many renters search for phrases like “what can get you denied for an apartment” or “why would a rental application be denied”. For landlords, the better question is this: what are the valid reasons to deny a rental application without creating fair housing risk? This guide covers 18 common reasons, what to document, and the mistakes to avoid.
Quick answer: A landlord may usually deny an application for documented business reasons such as insufficient income, unverifiable information, poor credit, prior evictions, repeated lease violations, inaccurate application details, or other written criteria that are applied equally to every applicant.
Not sure yet? Run a tenant screening report now and verify credit, criminal, and rental-history information before you decide.
In This Guide
- Before you deny any applicant
- 18 legal reasons to reject a tenant application
- Illegal reasons to deny a rental application
- FAQ: common rental denial questions
- Tenant screening and landlord resources
Before You Deny Any Applicant
Before reviewing applications, create a written rental criteria policy. That policy should explain your income standard, occupancy standard, credit expectations, pet and smoking rules, required documents, and how you evaluate rental history. Then apply the same process to every applicant.
- Be objective. Base decisions on documents, reports, references, and written standards.
- Be consistent. If you verify income or run screening for one applicant, do the same for all comparable applicants.
- Document your reason. Keep notes, reports, and date-stamped records.
- Use caution with criminal history. Blanket bans can create fair housing risk. Focus on relevant, recent, and property-related risk, and check state and local law.
- Know when an adverse action notice may be required. If consumer report information influenced the denial, you may need to provide a notice to the applicant.
Best practice: Give every applicant the same written screening criteria before you accept an application fee. That improves compliance, helps filter out unqualified applicants, and makes denials easier to defend.
18 Legal Reasons to Reject a Tenant Application
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Insufficient income
If the applicant does not meet your written income standard, denial may be justified. Many landlords use a fixed rent-to-income ratio such as 2.5x to 3x monthly rent, but the key is that your rule is written and applied equally.
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Income cannot be verified
No reliable pay stubs, employer verification, tax returns, benefit statements, or other acceptable proof of income? That is a common and legitimate reason to deny.
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Poor credit history
Serious delinquencies, collections, charge-offs, unpaid housing debt, or a credit score below your minimum threshold may indicate elevated payment risk.
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Debt obligations are too high
Even if gross income looks acceptable, an applicant may still be overextended. A high debt burden can be a valid denial reason when your written criteria clearly address debt-to-income or total monthly obligations.
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Prior eviction history
Prior evictions, especially for nonpayment or serious lease violations, are commonly used screening factors. Use your written policy and verify details before relying on them.
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History of late rent payments
Repeated late payments, unpaid balances, or broken payment plans with prior landlords may signal future collection problems.
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Negative landlord references
If prior landlords report lease violations, property damage, unauthorized occupants, disturbances, threats, or that they would not rent to the applicant again, that can support a denial.
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Negative employer or personal references
References can reveal reliability issues, false statements, unstable work history, or conduct concerns that directly relate to your written screening standards.
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False, misleading, or incomplete application information
Application fraud is one of the strongest reasons to deny. Examples include fake pay stubs, missing addresses, false employment details, omitted occupants, or identity inconsistencies.
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Refusal to authorize screening
If an applicant refuses a credit check, background check, identity verification, or other standard screening step required of all applicants, you may generally deny the application.
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Unstable or insufficient employment history
Short job tenure or repeated unexplained employment gaps may be relevant if your written criteria address job stability and you evaluate all applicants the same way.
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Frequent moves or weak rental history
Frequent moves are not automatically disqualifying, but they can be a concern if your policy flags multiple moves in a short period, limited rental history, or unexplained gaps in residence history.
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Occupancy exceeds your legal limit
You may deny applicants when the total number of occupants would exceed your lawful occupancy standard for the unit. Make sure your standard complies with federal, state, and local rules.
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Unauthorized pets or refusal to follow pet policy
If the property has a lawful pet policy and the applicant will not comply, denial may be justified. Important: service animals and other assistance animals are not treated the same as pets under fair housing rules.
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Refusal to follow a no-smoking rule
If your property is smoke-free and that rule applies to all tenants, an applicant who will not comply may be denied.
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Documented lease violations or property damage
Prior unauthorized occupants, repeated nuisance complaints, illegal subletting, substantial damage beyond normal wear and tear, or similar lease breaches may justify denial.
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Documented criminal conduct that creates a real property or safety risk
Criminal history requires careful review. If your policy considers convictions, use an individualized, lawful standard tied to resident safety or property protection, and check your state and local restrictions before denying.
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Evidence of illegal activity connected to housing or tenant conduct
Credible evidence of drug distribution, violence, fraud, or other illegal conduct that threatens the property, neighbors, or lease compliance may support denial when properly documented.
What to Document for Every Denial
| Screening factor | What to keep in your file |
|---|---|
| Income / employment | Pay stubs, employer verification, benefit statements, notes on your written income standard |
| Credit / debt | Credit report date, score threshold used, delinquency notes, adverse action records if applicable |
| Rental history | Landlord reference notes, payment history, lease violation details, eviction verification |
| Application accuracy | Copies of inconsistent documents, missing fields, fraud indicators, communication log |
| Occupancy / policies | Your written occupancy standard, pet policy, smoking policy, and applicant acknowledgments |
Illegal Reasons to Deny a Rental Application
You should never deny an applicant because of a protected characteristic or because of inconsistent, arbitrary treatment. Examples of illegal or high-risk denial reasons include:
- Race or color
- Religion
- National origin
- Sex
- Disability
- Familial status
- Retaliation for exercising legal rights
- Refusal to make a lawful accommodation for a service or assistance animal
- Applying stricter standards to one applicant than another
- Using blanket criminal-history rules without checking current law
Important: The safest denial is one that is based on a written policy, supported by documents, and applied exactly the same way to every applicant.
Can a Landlord Reject an Application for Any Reason?
No. A landlord can reject an application only for lawful, non-discriminatory reasons that are tied to legitimate screening criteria. The reason should be objective, documented, and consistently applied.
Do You Have to Tell an Applicant Why They Were Denied?
If consumer report information influenced the decision, you may need to provide an adverse action notice. Even when a formal notice is not required, clear documentation and professional communication are smart business practices.
Should You Post Your Rental Criteria Up Front?
Yes. Posting or sharing your criteria in advance can improve lead quality, reduce unqualified applications, and make your denial decisions easier to defend.
FAQ: Common Search Questions About Rental Denials
What can get you denied for an apartment?
Common reasons include insufficient income, unverifiable income, poor credit, prior evictions, inaccurate application information, negative landlord references, or refusal to complete standard screening.
Why would an apartment application be denied?
Most apartment applications are denied because the applicant does not meet the property’s written criteria or because the landlord cannot verify the information needed to approve the application.
Can a landlord reject an application for bad credit?
Yes, if bad credit violates a written minimum standard and that standard is applied consistently to all applicants.
Can you deny an applicant because of a criminal record?
Sometimes, but this area is sensitive and highly dependent on state and local law. Avoid blanket bans. Use current, written, job-related and property-related criteria, and consult counsel where needed.
Can you deny an applicant because they have a pet?
You may usually enforce a lawful pet policy, but you cannot treat a service animal or other qualifying assistance animal the same as a pet.
Can frequent moves be a valid reason to deny?
They can be a warning sign, but they should not be used casually. Frequent moves are best evaluated alongside income, references, rental history, and the applicant’s explanation.
What is a good reason for moving on a rental application?
Applicants often list job relocation, needing more space, downsizing, school, commute changes, family needs, or the end of a lease. As a landlord, the key is not the wording itself – it is whether the full application is truthful, verifiable, and meets your written criteria.
Screen Smarter and Reduce Denial Risk
The easiest way to make a confident approval or denial decision is to verify the facts before you act.
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Legal disclaimer: This article is provided for general educational purposes and is not legal advice. Fair housing, tenant-screening, notice, and criminal-history rules vary by state and city. Review current law before denying any application.
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