How to Build Rental Credit: Get Approved With No or Bad Credit

Last updated: March 2026 ยท 8 min read

Sources: Federal Trade Commission ยท Kent State University ยท US Department of Housing and Urban Development. This article is for informational purposes only.

Credit is the central hurdle for first-time renters and anyone recovering from financial difficulty. Most large property management companies run hard credit checks and have automatic minimum score cutoffs. But credit is not the only factor landlords consider โ€” and there are proven strategies to get approved, and then use your rental history to build the credit that makes your next application easier.

What Credit Score Do You Need to Rent?

There is no universal minimum, but industry patterns are fairly consistent:

Credit Score RangeTypical Outcome
720+Strong approval likelihood; often qualifies for best units
660โ€“719Good; most landlords will approve with solid income
620โ€“659Fair; may need a co-signer or larger deposit
580โ€“619Difficult; private landlords better bet than large companies
Below 580Very difficult at traditional buildings; co-signer or private market necessary
No credit fileOften treated like 580โ€“620; income and references matter more

How to Get Approved With No Credit History

Having no credit is different from having bad credit. Many landlords understand that a first-time renter simply hasn't had the opportunity to build a file. These strategies improve your odds significantly.

1. Get a Co-Signer

A co-signer agrees to be legally responsible for the rent if you can't pay. Most landlords accept a creditworthy parent, older sibling, or family friend as a co-signer. The co-signer must typically earn 4โ€“5 times the monthly rent and have a strong credit score. This is the fastest approval path for first-time renters with no credit history.

2. Offer a Larger Security Deposit

Offering two or three months as a security deposit reduces the landlord's financial risk. This approach works better with private landlords than large property management companies, which often have standardized processes that don't allow deposit negotiation. State law may cap how much a landlord can accept, so check your state's limit.

3. Document Your Income Thoroughly

Landlords care about income as much as credit. Providing three to four months of bank statements, recent pay stubs, and an employment verification letter demonstrates stability even without a credit history. A general rule is showing income of 3ร— monthly rent. Use our rent affordability calculator to find the income range you need to target.

4. Target Private Landlords

Individual landlords who own one to four units typically evaluate applications more holistically than large companies. They are more likely to consider your in-person impression, references, and income over a specific credit score. Search Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace, and local neighborhood groups for private landlord listings alongside the major platforms.

5. Provide Strong References

A letter from a previous landlord (or a school housing office, dorm advisor, or employer confirming you're reliable) carries weight with private landlords. Ask references who know you well to write brief, specific letters describing your reliability, cleanliness, and responsibility.

6. Apply for a Secured Credit Card Before You Search

A secured credit card requires a cash deposit equal to the credit limit, eliminating risk for the issuer. Using it for small purchases and paying the balance in full each month builds a credit file. Six months of on-time payments can establish a FICO score, usually in the 650โ€“680 range. Start this process three to six months before you plan to apartment hunt.

Tip: Check whether you're pre-qualified for a secured card through your existing bank first โ€” many large banks (Wells Fargo, Capital One, Discover) offer them with no hard credit inquiry for pre-qualification.

How to Build Credit Using Rent Payments

Once you're in an apartment, your on-time rent payments can actively build your credit score โ€” but only if they're reported to the credit bureaus. By default, most landlords do not report rent payments.

Rent Reporting Services

These services submit your monthly rent payments to one or more of the three major credit bureaus (Experian, Equifax, TransUnion):

Studies show that adding on-time rent payment history can increase credit scores by 20โ€“60 points for people with thin credit files. The effect is largest for people with scores below 680.

Other Ways to Build Credit Simultaneously

While paying rent, layer in additional credit-building strategies:

Timeline: From No Credit to Good Rental Credit

MonthActionExpected Result
Month 1โ€“2Open secured credit card; enroll in rent reporting serviceCredit file established
Month 3โ€“6Pay secured card in full monthly; make all rent payments on timeScore reaches 620โ€“650 range
Month 6โ€“12Continue pattern; consider credit-builder loanScore reaches 660โ€“700 range
Month 12+Apply for unsecured starter credit card; increase available creditScore reaches 700+ range

If You Have Bad Credit (Not Just No Credit)

Bad credit โ€” missed payments, collections, or a past eviction โ€” is harder to overcome than no credit. An eviction record on your rental history is particularly damaging as it appears in dedicated tenant screening reports (TransUnion SmartMove, RentBureau) separate from your credit report.

Steps to recover:

Sources: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau credit reporting guidance ยท FICO scoring methodology documentation ยท Experian rent reporting data. Last verified March 2026.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only, not financial advice. Last updated: March 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does paying rent build credit?
Rent payments do not automatically appear on credit reports. However, services like Experian RentBureau, Rent Reporters, and Boom will report your on-time rent payments to one or more credit bureaus for a monthly fee of $5 to $10. Some landlords and property management platforms offer this automatically.
What credit score do you need to rent an apartment?
Most landlords prefer a credit score of 620 or higher. Scores of 700 or above give you the strongest application. Scores below 580 may require a co-signer, larger deposit, or proof of substantial income. Some landlords in smaller buildings or private rentals have no minimum and focus on income instead.
How can I rent an apartment with no credit history?
Options include getting a creditworthy co-signer, offering a larger security deposit (2 to 3 months instead of 1), showing 3 to 4 times monthly rent in income, providing strong employment documentation, bringing a letter from a previous landlord, or targeting private landlords who care less about credit scores than large property management companies do.