Guide

Eviction-Friendly Apartments FAQ

Straight answers to the anxiety questions renters with evictions are afraid to ask — approvals, costs, records, options.

By Eviction Advocate Licensed Texas Real Estate Agent Updated July 10, 2026
Renter reading answers on phone at home

The questions renters ask us in the first phone call — the ones they’re too embarrassed or worried to ask a leasing agent. Here are direct answers.

Approval questions

Can I really rent with an eviction? Yes. Every eviction category — recent, old, paid, unpaid, dismissed, multiple — has real placement paths in Texas. The right property matters more than the filing itself. Our scenario services walk each category.

What’s my realistic timeline? 1-3 weeks with a licensed locator working the right properties. 2-6 months without one, plus $500-$1,500 in wasted application fees.

Which properties are hardest? Class-A luxury with automated SafeRent screening. Cortland and NRP Group properties tend to be strictest.

Which are easiest? Independent operators in older submarkets. In Houston: Katy, Cypress. In DFW: Oak Cliff, Haltom City. In San Antonio: Leon Valley, Live Oak. In Austin: Round Rock, Pflugerville.

Do I need a guarantor? Depends on your file. Recent + unpaid usually yes. Older + paid usually no. See our guarantor review.

Records and screening questions

How long does an eviction stay on my record? Court filing is permanent. Screening reports should drop it after 7 years under the FCRA. See our record duration guide.

Can I get my eviction expunged in Texas? No. Texas has no expungement mechanism. See our expungement guide.

Will paying the balance remove it? No — but paying updates the balance status to “satisfied,” which significantly improves approval odds. See our pay off guide.

What if my dismissed eviction still shows? Dispute it under the FCRA. See our dispute guide.

How do I check what’s on my record? Pull your screening report from SafeRent, TransUnion SmartMove, or LexisNexis. See our check history guide.

FAQ questions on laptop screen

Cost questions

How much extra will I pay? Move-in cash typically 30-70% higher than a standard renter. Risk fee, double deposit, sometimes guarantor. See our cost guide.

What’s a risk fee? Non-refundable one-time fee ($150-$500) for higher-risk applicants. See our risk fee guide.

Do I get the double deposit back? Yes — deposits are refundable at move-out minus damages. Risk fees are not refundable.

Can I use Rhino to skip the double deposit? Often yes — replaces cash deposit with $15-$50/month premium. Doesn’t help with automated eviction denials though.

Is the free locating service really free? Yes. The property pays a referral commission when you sign. Not from your pocket, not added to rent.

Disclosure questions

Do I have to tell the leasing agent about my eviction? It’ll show on screening either way. Proactive disclosure with a good LOE always outperforms trying to hide it. See our what to say guide.

What should I say? 30-second script: acknowledge briefly, explain context in one sentence, pivot to current employment and income. See the script in our disclosure guide.

Should I lie about the eviction? Never. It’ll be caught, and the underwriter will feel deceived — automatic denial.

Can I refuse to discuss it? Legally yes, but it hurts your application. Refusing to discuss reads as defensive.

What are my FCRA rights? You have the right to see any screening report used against you, to dispute inaccurate information, and to receive adverse action notices. See our dispute guide.

Can a landlord deny me for a dismissed eviction? Legally yes. Dismissed filings still appear on screening reports and are not a protected class under Fair Housing. See our dismissed denial guide.

What if the eviction was unjust? Doesn’t matter for screening — the filing is on record. You can dispute inaccuracies via FCRA, but the fact of the filing stays.

Do I need a lawyer? For most placement work, no. For complex FCRA disputes, wrongful eviction claims, or landlord disputes, consider consulting Texas Legal Services Center (855-270-7655) or Texas RioGrande Legal Aid.

Renter calling licensed apartment locator

Service questions (about us)

How is your service actually free? Property management companies pay a referral commission ($500-$1,500 typical) to licensed real estate agents who bring them a signed lease. That commission is baked into their marketing budget. It doesn’t touch your rent or deposit.

Are you licensed? Yes — TREC #679806, brokered by Spirit Real Estate Group.

How fast will you call me back? Within 2 hours during business hours (Mon-Fri 8AM-7PM CT, Sat 9AM-5PM CT).

What if I don’t get placed? No cost to you. We only make money when you sign a lease.

Do you handle all Texas metros? Yes: Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, Fort Worth, Arlington, and surrounding areas.

Do you help with legal issues? No — we’re licensed real estate agents, not attorneys. For legal matters we route to Texas Legal Services Center or local legal aid.

The last question

How do I start?

Fill out the form on our home page or call 808-213-6770. A licensed Texas agent will call you within 2 hours to walk your file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I rent with a recent eviction?

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Yes, but options narrow the more recent the filing. Under 6 months is hardest. The right properties and prep are key.

Do I have to disclose my eviction?

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It's on the screening report either way. Proactive disclosure with a good letter of explanation always outperforms trying to hide it.

How is the service really free?

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Property management companies pay a referral commission when you sign a lease. That commission is baked into their marketing budget — it doesn't add anything to your rent or fees.

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