Apartment hunting feels overwhelming in competitive markets where good units receive multiple applications within hours of listing. But the renters who consistently find and secure great apartments aren't lucky — they're prepared. This guide covers what to do before you start searching, how to evaluate units efficiently, and how to move fast enough to beat other applicants.
Before You Start: Set Your Budget and Non-Negotiables
The most common apartment hunting mistake is browsing without a budget — and falling in love with something you can't afford. Use our rent affordability calculator before you look at a single listing. Know your maximum rent number, then stick to it.
Then write down your actual non-negotiables (features you cannot live without) vs. nice-to-haves (features that would be great but aren't dealbreakers). Be honest. People regularly confuse the two, which leads to passing on perfectly good apartments waiting for something that doesn't exist at their price point.
Common Non-Negotiables
- Location/commute (maximum commute time)
- Pet policy (if you have or plan to have a pet)
- Minimum number of bedrooms
- Parking (if you have a car in a city without abundant street parking)
- Laundry access (in-unit, in-building, or laundromat is acceptable?)
Common Nice-to-Haves
- Dishwasher
- Central A/C (vs. window units)
- Updated kitchen or bathroom
- High floor or better view
- Gym or pool in building
Where to Search
Cast a wide net by using multiple platforms simultaneously — no single site has all listings:
- Zillow: Largest inventory; good for broad market overview and price trends
- Apartments.com: Strong for larger apartment complexes and property management companies
- Zumper: Strong in major metros; good filtering tools
- HotPads / Rent.com: Alternative searches, sometimes catch listings others miss
- Craigslist / Facebook Marketplace: Essential for private landlord listings that never appear on major platforms; exercise more caution here (verify identity before sending any money)
- Building websites directly: Some larger complexes list units only on their own site; if you've identified buildings you like, check them directly
- Neighborhood Facebook groups: "ISO apartment" posts in local Facebook groups often surface rooms and listings before they're formally listed
Timing Your Search
When you search matters as much as where.
Time of Year
- May–August: Peak season. Most listings, most competition, highest prices. Less room to negotiate.
- November–February: Slowest season. Fewer listings but far less competition, more negotiating power, and landlords more motivated to fill vacancies quickly.
- March–April and September–October: Moderate competition, decent selection.
Day of Week
New listings post most frequently on Tuesday through Thursday. Set up search alerts on Zillow and Zumper to get instant email or push notifications so you can apply within hours of a listing going live.
What to Look for During an Apartment Tour
Never sign a lease on an apartment you haven't seen in person, or at minimum on a live video walkthrough with the landlord. Photos are always flattering.
Structural and Mechanical
- Water stains on ceilings or walls (current or past leaks)
- Mold or musty smell, especially in closets and bathrooms
- Evidence of pests: droppings, live insects, sticky traps
- Window condition: do they open, close, and lock?
- Water pressure and drainage: run all faucets, flush toilets
- HVAC: turn on heat and A/C to confirm they work
- All electrical outlets and light switches
- Cell signal and/or check if internet infrastructure is available
Building and Neighborhood
- Condition of common areas: hallways, lobby, laundry room
- Mailbox security
- Package delivery/storage
- Noise level during the tour (street noise, other tenants)
- Condition of building exterior and entryways
- Parking situation if relevant
Questions to Ask the Landlord
- How is maintenance requested and what's the typical response time?
- What utilities are included?
- How long has the unit been listed and why did the last tenant leave?
- Are there any planned rent increases for next year?
- What is the pet policy (even if you have no pets — rules can change)?
- Is the unit on a month-to-month or fixed-term lease?
Red Flags That Should Make You Walk Away
- Landlord who is never available or hard to reach — maintenance will be the same
- Building in visibly poor condition while asking market-rate rent
- Landlord who asks for cash only or wants payment before signing a lease
- Listing photos that look professionally staged with no real-life equivalent
- Rent that is 20–30% below comparable listings (often a scam or serious hidden issues)
- Missing smoke detectors or carbon monoxide detectors
- Signs of pest infestation in multiple areas
How to Apply Fast and Stand Out
In competitive markets, the first qualified applicant often wins. Speed is everything.
Pre-Assemble Your Application Package
Before you start touring, have these ready to send immediately:
- PDF of government-issued ID
- Last two pay stubs or income documentation
- Last two to three months of bank statements
- Completed rental application (fill in a blank version ahead of time)
- Reference contacts with phone numbers and emails
- Credit report (pull your own free copy at annualcreditreport.com)
- A brief "renter resume" — one paragraph about yourself, your employment, and why you'd be a reliable tenant
Apply the Same Day as the Tour
In hot markets, waiting overnight is often too long. If you see a unit you want, apply before you leave the building or within the same day. Bring your application documents to tours or have them ready to email immediately.
A Short Introduction Note Goes a Long Way with Private Landlords
Private landlords (as opposed to corporate property managers) often choose tenants they feel comfortable with. A brief, professional introduction — your name, occupation, why you want the apartment, and a line confirming your reliability — can be the deciding factor between equally qualified applicants.
Negotiating After You've Found the Right Place
Once you have an offer, there's often room to negotiate. See our full guide on how to negotiate rent for scripts and strategies. And before signing, read our guide on how to read a lease so you know every clause you're agreeing to.
Sources: Zillow Rental Market Reports · National Multifamily Housing Council data. Last verified March 2026.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only. Last updated: March 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How far in advance should I start apartment hunting?
- Start 60 to 90 days before your desired move-in date in competitive markets like New York, San Francisco, or Boston. In most other markets, 30 to 45 days is sufficient. Many landlords list apartments 30 to 60 days before the availability date, and the best units go quickly once listed.
- What are red flags when looking at apartments?
- Major red flags include signs of water damage (stains on ceilings, walls, or floors), mold or musty smells, pest evidence, a landlord who refuses to do a proper walkthrough, maintenance requests that have been ignored, and pressure to sign immediately without reading the lease. Also watch for unusually low rent that seems too good to be true.
- What are the best websites to search for apartments?
- Major platforms include Zillow, Apartments.com, Rent.com, Zumper, and HotPads for most markets. Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace list private landlord rentals that don't appear on larger platforms. For a broader search, use multiple platforms simultaneously since listings are not always syndicated across all of them.