Rental scams cost Americans an estimated $485 million in 2025. The average victim loses $1,200 — a security deposit and first month's rent for a property the scammer never owned. With housing costs rising and competition fierce, scammers exploit renter urgency.
Rental listing seem too good? Paste the URL or landlord email into IsThisAScam.to for a quick check.
Red Flag 1: Price Below Market
A beautiful 2-bedroom in downtown Austin for $650/month when market rate is $1,800 is not a gem — it is a trap.
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Red Flag 2: Landlord Will Not Meet
"I'm deployed overseas. My pastor will handle keys once you wire the deposit." — Scam email, March 2026
Red Flag 3: Payment Before Viewing
Never pay anything without physically visiting the property.
Red Flag 4: Wire or Gift Card Payment
Legitimate landlords accept checks and bank transfers with paper trails.
Verification Steps
- Search the address across multiple listing sites — compare photos, prices, contacts
- Verify property ownership through county assessor records
- Reverse image search the photos (full guide)
- Visit independently — drive by, talk to neighbors
- Verify landlord identity against ownership records and business registration
- Read the lease carefully before signing
Common Rental Scam Types
- Phantom Listing: Property does not exist or is not for rent. Photos stolen from real estate listings.
- Hijacked Listing: Real listing reposted with scammer's contact info.
- Bait and Switch: "Just rented" — steered to a worse property.
- Illegal Sublet: Current tenant rents out property they do not own.
Platform Tips
- Craigslist: Highest risk. Always verify independently.
- Facebook Marketplace: Check profile age and activity.
- Zillow/Apartments.com: Lower risk but scams still appear.
IsThisAScam's 6-layer detection analyzes landlord emails and listing URLs. See email verification.
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