Real Estate

CEO and Founder of L.A. Property Management Group and Crown Commercial Property Management.

Researching the credit of rental applicants is essential to choosing the most qualified tenant for a unit, now more than ever. Credit can’t tell you everything you need to know about an applicant, but historically, it has provided important information in the selection process. However, the pandemic has complicated things where credit is concerned.

Millions of people were unemployed for a year or longer due to shutdowns for public safety and relied on assistance programs to continue renting their residences. Many still do. As property managers, the question we should ask ourselves is: What do these changes in the effectiveness of credit checks mean for our industry? Let’s explore some information that’s pertinent to answering that question.           

Credit scores might not be as effective… for now.

Joelle Scally, a financial and economic analyst for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, has gone on record as saying, “[Credit scores] are a really important tool for lenders to identify creditworthy borrowers, but with the protection of the forbearance programs some of that may be muddled.” Given that the typical indicators of poor credit (such as unpaid rent and other outstanding payments) don’t have the same implications right now due to the circumstances of a global pandemic, it makes sense that credit scores aren’t as cut-and-dried as they usually are.

A permanent weakening of credit scores as a tool would cause a significant shift in the way property managers and property owners evaluate applicants, but fortunately, that’s not in the forecast. The efficacy of traditional credit scores will return, and in the meantime, banks are in the process of developing more holistic tools. That leads me to the next key factor.

New models are incoming.

Financial institutions are hard at work developing data-driven analysis models that will provide a more accurate credit risk assessment than current systems. Basically, help is on the way. Just like FICO updated its credit scoring system in January 2020 to include personal loans as a distinct category, new credit assessment systems will likely be able to account for the intricacies of how the pandemic affected a person’s financial standing. But just as you wouldn’t expect the financial sector to sit idly by while a worldwide disaster weakened one of its most essential tools, you shouldn’t sit idly by and wait for new metrics to return the tenant-analysis process to normal.

Property managers will have to strengthen other evaluation efforts.

This might go without saying, but there’s no way around it: In the current absence of a perfect credit-checking system that contextualizes pandemic debts, property managers will have to place greater emphasis on their other means of appraising a prospective tenant’s financial responsibility. If you used to only call the tenant’s previous landlord, call their previous two landlords now. If you used to only run a statewide eviction search on them, run a nationwide one now. Both of these examples should already be standard practices for all property managers already, but if they’re not for you, now’s the time to step up.

In addition, you can ask for verification of previous money transfers between the tenant and their landlord in order to support the tenant’s creditability. If anything, the inability to rely on credit checks should make you even better at selecting tenants in the future because you should retain the skills and practices you develop as a result.


Forbes Real Estate Council is an invitation-only community for executives in the real estate industry. Do I qualify?


Articles You May Like

Bitcoin could end year at $58K as futures market ‘overheated’ — CryptoQuant
DeltaPrime exploited for $4.8M worth of ARB and AVAX tokens
Hedge funds performed better under Democratic presidents than Republican ones, history shows
BTC’s ‘incoming’ $110K call, BlackRock’s $1.1B inflow day, and more: Hodler’s Digest Nov. 3 – 9
Top bond counsel first 9 months 2024