Rental scams thrive in competitive housing markets where urgency makes people vulnerable. Scammers create fake listings using photos from real properties, collect deposits, and disappear. This guide helps you verify listings before sending money.
Suspicious rental listing?
Paste the listing details — our AI identifies common rental fraud patterns.
No signup · 6 detection layers · Results in seconds · Cmd+Enter
If the rent is significantly below market rate for the area, it's likely a scam. Scammers price below market to attract more victims quickly. Check comparable listings on Zillow, Apartments.com, or local rental sites to understand fair pricing.
Download the listing photos and search them on Google Images. Scammers steal photos from real estate listings, vacation rental sites, or sold properties. If the same photos appear on a different listing at a different address, it's a scam.
Check county property records to verify who owns the property. The "landlord" contacting you should match the property records, or be a verified property management company. Many counties have free online property record searches.
Never send money for a property you haven't visited in person. If the landlord says they're "out of town" and will mail you the keys after you wire a deposit, it's a scam. Insist on an in-person tour.
Pay by check (not cashier's check) or through an established property management platform. Never wire money, send gift cards, or use Zelle/Venmo for rental deposits. These payment methods are irreversible.