Finding the right tenant is one of the most critical decisions a landlord or property manager makes. A thorough screening process — reviewing applications, verifying employment and income, ordering credit and background checks, and checking references — is time-consuming when done properly. A tenant screening virtual assistant manages this entire process, coordinating information collection, initiating background checks through compliant platforms, and delivering organized applicant summaries so you can make faster, better-informed decisions without cutting corners.
What This VA Does
| Task | Details |
|---|---|
| Application collection and review | Receives rental applications and checks for completeness before processing |
| Income and employment verification | Contacts employers and requests pay stubs or bank statements for income verification |
| Background and credit check initiation | Orders checks through compliant platforms like TransUnion SmartMove or RentSpree |
| Reference checks | Contacts previous landlords and personal references with standardized questions |
| Applicant comparison summaries | Creates side-by-side summaries of qualified applicants for final decision-making |
| Adverse action notice preparation | Prepares required denial notices when applications are declined per Fair Credit Reporting Act rules |
| Application status communication | Keeps applicants informed of where they are in the review process |
| Waitlist management | Maintains a waitlist of qualified applicants for future vacancies |
Skills and Tools Required
A tenant screening VA must understand the Fair Housing Act and Fair Credit Reporting Act requirements to ensure the screening process is both compliant and consistent. They should be familiar with tenant screening platforms such as TransUnion SmartMove, RentSpree, Rentler, or AppFolio's screening module.
Strong organizational skills are needed to manage multiple applications simultaneously, especially for high-demand properties. Clear written communication is important for corresponding with applicants professionally. Experience in property management, leasing administration, or residential real estate support is the best preparation for this role.
What to Pay
| Level | Rate |
|---|---|
| Entry | $7–$12/hr |
| Mid | $12–$20/hr |
| Specialist | $20–$28/hr |
Entry-level VAs handle application collection and basic verification tasks. Mid-level VAs manage the full screening workflow independently. Specialists with property management experience can handle complex multi-unit screening processes and Fair Housing compliance nuances.
How to Hire
Define your screening criteria before hiring — minimum credit score, income-to-rent ratio, rental history requirements, and any other standards you apply consistently. Document these criteria and share them with your VA to ensure consistent application. Having clear, written standards also protects you from Fair Housing complaints.
Ask interview candidates about their knowledge of Fair Housing Act requirements, specifically which protected classes are covered and how they apply to the screening process. Their answer indicates their compliance awareness. Also ask about their experience with specific screening platforms.
Confirm that your screening process and the VA's handling of applicant data comply with applicable state and local tenant screening laws, which can be stricter than federal requirements in some jurisdictions.
"With our VA handling screening, we went from taking two weeks to place a tenant to under five days, and the quality of our tenants has actually improved because we are not cutting corners under time pressure." — Residential landlord, 12 units
For landlords also needing support with lease agreements, see our lease agreement preparation virtual assistant guide. If rent collection is also a challenge, our rent collection follow-up virtual assistant article covers that workflow.
Ready to Hire?
Ready to hire a virtual assistant? Virtual Assistant VA connects you with trained VAs who specialize in this task.