The Bronx Landlord's Complete Guide to Tenant Screening in 2026
The most expensive mistake a Bronx landlord can make happens before the lease is signed. Placing the wrong tenant can mean months of missed rent, a costly eviction process, and a unit that needs significant repairs before it can be rented again.
The good news: most bad tenant situations are entirely preventable with a consistent, thorough screening process.
Here is the exact framework DoryAngel has refined over 15 years of managing Bronx properties.
Step 1: Set Clear, Written Qualification Criteria
Before you advertise a single unit, write down your requirements. This protects you legally and makes every decision defensible.
Standard criteria to define:
- Minimum income (typically 40–45x monthly rent in NYC)
- Credit score threshold (650+ is common; explain exceptions in writing)
- Rental history requirements (no evictions in past 5 years)
- Employment status verification
Important: Your criteria must be applied identically to every applicant. Inconsistent standards expose you to fair housing complaints. Put your criteria in writing and keep a copy of every application you receive.
Step 2: The Application
A complete rental application should capture:
- Full legal name, date of birth, current and prior addresses (5 years)
- Employment history and current employer contact
- Monthly income (all sources)
- Banking information for income verification
- Emergency contact
- Written consent for credit and background check
Never skip the written consent. Running a credit check without it is a legal violation.
Step 3: Credit Check — What to Actually Look For
A credit report tells you far more than a score. Here is what matters:
| What You See | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Collections from utility companies | Likely to default on rent |
| Multiple credit accounts maxed out | Cash-flow problems right now |
| Judgment from a landlord | May have been evicted before — check court records |
| Thin file (no credit history) | Requires additional income verification, not automatic disqualification |
| Medical collections only | Generally less predictive of rental payment behavior |
A 580 score with perfect rental history is often a better risk than a 700 score with a landlord judgment.
Step 4: Eviction History — The Most Important Check
In New York, eviction records are public. Search the New York State eCourts system (iapps.courts.state.ny.us) for any Housing Court filings under the applicant's name.
Look for:
- Holdover proceedings — tenant refused to leave after lease ended
- Non-payment proceedings — tenant stopped paying rent
- Multiple filings across multiple addresses — pattern of behavior
One non-payment filing that was resolved and dismissed 6 years ago is very different from three filings in the last two years. Read the records, not just the count.
Step 5: Employment and Income Verification
Call the employer directly — not the number the applicant provided, but the number you find independently on the company's public website or directory. Fraudulent employer references are more common than most landlords realize.
For self-employed applicants:
- Request two years of filed tax returns (not just the first page)
- Bank statements for the last three months
- CPA or accountant contact for verification
For applicants relying on benefits/vouchers:
- Verify voucher validity directly with the issuing agency
- Confirm the voucher amount covers the full rent
Step 6: Reference Check — The Questions That Actually Matter
Most landlord references say very little because prior landlords fear fair housing liability. Ask these specific questions instead:
- "Would you rent to this tenant again?" (A pause says more than the answer)
- "Were there any lease violations during their tenancy?"
- "Did they give proper notice before vacating?"
- "Were there any disputes over the security deposit?"
Red Flags That Override Good Numbers
Even with a strong application, walk away if you see:
- Pressure to skip any part of the process ("I can pay 3 months upfront, can we skip the credit check?")
- Inconsistencies between the application and supporting documents
- A current landlord who is overly enthusiastic — they may be trying to get rid of the tenant
- Inability to explain gaps in rental history
The Cost of Getting This Wrong
An uncontested eviction in New York City takes an average of 3–6 months from filing to removal. During that time:
- Lost rent: $1,800–$3,000/month
- Legal fees: $2,000–$4,000
- Unit repairs after vacate: $1,000–$8,000+
- Re-leasing vacancy: 30–60 days additional
Total exposure: $10,000–$20,000+ for one bad placement.
A thorough screening process that takes 5–7 extra days costs nothing by comparison.
Let DoryAngel Handle Screening For You
Our screening process is built on 15 years of placing tenants across Bronx and NYC properties. We handle every step — application, credit, eviction search, employment verification, references — and present you with a clear recommendation and a complete documentation file.
Book your free consultation and ask about our tenant placement service.
DoryAngel Asset Management · 557 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY · (516) 847-4999 · office@doryangel.com