Deep guides for renters with a broken lease
The mechanics behind rental screening, collections, guarantors, and the pay-or-settle decisions in between. Written by the licensed Texas brokerage that places these renters every day.
Broken-lease essentials
Broken Lease vs Eviction: What's the Difference on Screening?
A broken lease is a balance owed; an eviction is a court judgment. See how each reports and why a broken lease is usually more placeable.
How Long Does a Broken Lease Stay on Your Rental History?
A broken lease can show on screening up to 7 years, but most lookback windows are 2-3 years. Here's the difference and what it means for approval.
How Rental History Screening Works: NCAC vs LeasingDesk vs SafeRent
Property managers use different screening vendors. Learn what NCAC, RealPage LeasingDesk, and SafeRent/CoreLogic report and why coverage differs.
How to Check Your NCAC and Rental Screening Reports
Request your rental screening reports under the FCRA. Which vendors to contact, what fields to read, and how to dispute errors before you apply.
Is a Broken Lease Apartment Locator Really Free?
Yes — our service is 100% free to renters. Communities pay a referral fee from advertising budgets. Here's how the model works and why there's no catch.
What Is a Risk Fee and How Much Does It Cost?
A risk fee is a one-time charge (usually $200-$1,000+) some communities require for conditional approval. When it applies and how it differs from a deposit.
Recent Broken Lease (Under 2 Years)
Can I Rent With a Broken Lease Under 2 Years Old?
Yes, it's possible. A recent broken lease is the hardest scenario, but some Texas communities conditionally approve. What makes a recent break placeable.
Conditional Approval With a Risk Fee: What to Expect
Conditional approval is the most common path for a recent broken lease. The fee ranges, deposit, income bar, and step-by-step approval flow.
How to Write a Letter of Explanation for a Recent Broken Lease
A strong letter of explanation can turn a denial into a conditional approval. What to include, the right tone, and which documents to attach.
Income Requirements for Recent Broken Lease Approval (3x-4x Rent)
Recent broken leases often require 3x-4x monthly rent in income. The math, how guarantors change it, and what proof you'll need.
Recent Broken Lease vs Waiting Until It's Older
Apply now or let your broken lease age out of the lookback window? Weigh the cost of waiting against the risk fees of applying today.
Should I Settle My Balance Before Applying?
Settling first can improve your odds — but timing matters. When a settlement helps, when to skip it, and what a settlement letter unlocks.
Why Most Communities Auto-Deny Recent Broken Leases
Automated screening thresholds deny most recent broken leases before a human looks. The denial mechanism and where case-by-case flexibility exists.
Older Broken Lease (2-5 Years)
Can I Rent If My Broken Lease Was More Than 3 Years Ago?
A broken lease over 3 years old usually falls outside most lookback windows, so it rarely triggers denial. What still matters at this age.
Does a Broken Lease Still Show After the Lookback Window Closes?
Yes — a broken lease can still appear on screening even after the lookback window closes. Why appearance doesn't equal denial.
Paid vs Unpaid Older Broken Lease: Does It Still Matter?
Even after 2-5 years, an unpaid balance can still matter — especially in collections. When to resolve it and when positive history offsets it.
What Is a Lookback Window and How Does It Work?
A lookback window is how far back a community weighs your rental history — often 2-3 years. How it makes older broken leases placeable.
Paid or Settled Broken Lease
Does Paying Off a Broken Lease Help You Get Approved?
Sometimes — paying opens more communities and can unlock no-fee approvals, but the mark can persist. When paying helps and when it doesn't.
How to Get a Paid-in-Full or Zero-Balance Letter From Your Old Apartment
A paid-in-full or zero-balance letter proves your broken lease is resolved. Who to contact, what to request, and how to use it in an application.
Paid vs Settled vs Paid-Through-Collections: What Documentation You Need
Paid in full, settled for less, and paid through collections are three different states. Which letter proves which and how PMCs read each.
Settled for Less: Will a Settlement Letter Be Accepted?
A settlement letter can satisfy many communities — but not all treat settled as paid. What the letter must contain and how to prepare it.
Broken Lease in Collections
Can I Rent If My Broken Lease Is in Collections?
Yes — a rental collection is a double hit, but many Texas communities approve anyway. What changes, and how income and documentation offset it.
Does Paying a Collection Reset the Reporting Clock?
With some scoring models, paying can re-date a collection and make it look newer. When paying hurts, when it helps, and safer alternatives.
How a Paid Collection Reports for 7 Years and What That Means
A paid collection updates to 'paid' but stays on your credit report for 7 years from original delinquency. What that means for renting.
National Credit Systems and IQ Data: Settling Texas Rental Debt
NCS and IQ Data hold most Texas rental debt. How to request debt validation and negotiate a settled-for-less or zero-balance outcome.
Rental Collections vs Other Collections: Why Some Communities Treat Them Differently
Not all collections are read the same. Why some communities treat a rental collection differently from medical or card debt — and how that opens options.
Should I Pay Off a Broken Lease Collection Before Applying?
Paying can help placement — or reset the reporting clock. When to pay, when to settle instead, and how move-in urgency changes the answer.
Texas 4-Year Statute of Limitations on Lease Debt
Texas has a 4-year statute of limitations on written contracts, including leases. What 'still owed but not suable' means and how to use it in negotiation.
Broken Lease With No Rental History Since
First Apartment After a Broken Lease: Guarantor vs Higher Deposit
Two common offsets for a broken lease: a guarantor or a higher deposit. Compare cost, which communities prefer which, and when you need both.
How Income and Employment Stability Offset a Broken Lease
When there's no history to offset a break, income does the work. How income multipliers, employment length, and proof-of-income drive approval.
How to Document Private Landlord or Roommate Rent Payments
Informal rent payments are real but invisible to screening. Build a paper trail with Venmo/Zelle records, signed statements, and bank proof.
Renting After a Broken Lease With No Rental History Since
No rental history since your break? Placement leans on income and employment. What PMCs weigh instead and why this pool is smaller but real.
Third-Party Guarantor for Broken Leases
Guarantor Fees and Move-In Cost: Is It Worth It?
A guarantor fee (5%-12% of annual rent) adds to your deposit and first month. The full move-in math and when a guarantor is worth it.
Guarantor Providers in Texas: Insurent, TheGuarantors, Jetty, and More
Compare Texas guarantor providers — Insurent, TheGuarantors, Jetty, RentWithCosign, Liberty Rent, OneApp — on fees, underwriting, and acceptance.
Guarantor Underwriting and Income Requirements (27x-50x Rent)
Guarantor companies underwrite too — usually 27x-50x monthly rent in income. Whether you qualify, what documents you'll need, and the process.
How a Third-Party Guarantor Works for a Broken Lease
A third-party guarantor co-signs your lease for a fee, covering financial risk. How it works, what it costs, and how landlords view it.
When Communities Won't Accept a Guarantor for a Broken Lease
Guarantors solve money, not behavior. Some communities reject them for a broken lease. Why, and how our agents find guarantor-accepting communities.
Reading is good. Placement is better.
When you're ready to turn what you've learned into a curated list of communities, we're here.