We can't label a specific listing a scam, but you can verify it: a rental is high-risk when the rent is far below market, you can't tour it, the 'owner' is out of the country, they demand a wire/Zelle/gift-card/crypto deposit, or they rush you to pay before a lease. Confirm the recorded owner of the address at the county assessor and the agent's license, tour in person, and never pay before you've verified.
Red flags of a rental scam
The rent is well below marketScammers price a unit 20–40% under comparable listings to create urgency and a too-good-to-pass feeling. Compare the asking rent to similar units in the same building/block.
You can't tour it in person"I'm out of the country / out of state / a missionary / military deployed" is the single most common rental-scam script — invented to explain why you can't meet or see inside. Never rent a place you (or someone you trust) haven't physically toured.
They want a wire, Zelle, Venmo, Cash App, gift cards, or crypto for the depositThese payment rails are irreversible and untraceable — that's exactly why scammers demand them. A legitimate landlord or property manager will take a normal traceable payment AFTER you've toured and signed.
They rush you and ask for money before a lease or a tour"Several people are interested, send the deposit to hold it" pressures you to pay before verifying. Real landlords screen YOU; they don't push you to pay sight-unseen.
The photos appear elsewhereMany scam listings reuse photos stolen from a real for-sale or for-rent listing of the same property. Reverse-image-search the listing photos; if they show up on a Zillow/Realtor sale listing or a different city, walk away.
The 'owner' or 'agent' won't prove ownership or authorityAsk the named owner/agent to confirm the recorded owner of record and show ID or a management agreement. A real party can do this; a scammer impersonating the owner cannot.
The listing or messages are full of errors, or the contact dodges questionsCopy-pasted scam scripts often have odd grammar, mismatched names, or refuse to give a phone number / answer a direct question about the unit.
They ask for a credit-card / SSN 'application fee' to an unverified siteA fake application-fee page is a way to harvest your identity and card. Only pay application fees to a verified property manager after confirming the listing is real.
What to do before you pay
Look up the recorded owner of the address at the county assessor and confirm the person you're dealing with is that owner or its authorized agent/manager.
If they claim to be a real-estate agent or broker, verify their license is active in the state's official registry.
Tour the unit in person (or send someone you trust) before paying anything.
Reverse-image-search the listing photos to catch stolen/duplicate images.
Compare the rent to similar nearby units — a price far below market is a warning.
Refuse wire / Zelle / Venmo / Cash App / gift-card / crypto deposits; use a traceable payment only after a tour and a signed lease.
Get a written lease with the real owner's or licensed manager's name; cross-check it against the recorded owner.
Never send a deposit, application fee, or 'holding fee' before you've confirmed the listing is real and toured it.
How to read this: We report public-record facts only (the recorded property owner per the county assessor; whether a named agent holds an active state real-estate license) and a general education checklist. We do NOT and CANNOT tell you a specific listing or person is a scam — a name mismatch has innocent explanations (LLCs, property managers, agents, relatives). Use this to VERIFY DIRECTLY. Never wire, Zelle, gift-card, or crypto a deposit before you have toured the unit and confirmed the listing is real.
FCRA: This is a public-record information tool, not a consumer report; do not use it for tenant screening or any FCRA-covered purpose.