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Is This Rental a Scam? How to Verify a Landlord

Updated: June 2026 · 175+ platforms searched

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Is This Rental a Scam? How to Verify a Landlord โ€” illustrated guide on Lullar
Found a rental on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, or Zillow? Verify the landlord's name, email, phone, and property ownership before you pay a deposit.
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Is This Rental a Scam? Quick Answer

A rental listing is likely a scam if the landlord refuses to show the unit in person, pressures you to pay a deposit fast, asks for a wire transfer, gift cards, Zelle, or cryptocurrency, and the rent is far below market. The single most reliable way to tell is to verify the person behind the listing before you pay anything. Legitimate landlords have a real name, a working phone, a traceable online footprint, and a documented connection to the property. Scammers on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, and copycat Zillow listings have none of these.

Before you send a dollar, confirm three things: (1) the lister is a real person, (2) their contact details are consistent across the web, and (3) they actually own or manage the property. You can start for free in minutes โ€” enter the landlord's name, email, or phone into Lullar to surface every linked profile across 170+ sites and check whether their identity holds together.

Why Rental Scams Work โ€” and Who Gets Targeted

Rental scams work because they exploit urgency in a tight housing market. Scammers copy a real listing's photos and address, repost it at a bargain price, and collect deposits from multiple victims before anyone tours the unit. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission warns that fraudsters often hijack legitimate listings or invent landlords who are conveniently "out of the country." Common targets include:

The defense is the same in every case: verify the human on the other end before money moves.

Want to Confirm Who Owns the Property?

Spokeo compiles a person's real name, phone, address history, and public records so you can confirm the landlord is who they claim before you send a deposit.

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Red Flags in a Rental Listing

Watch for these warning signs that point to a rental scam:

Any one of these is reason to slow down and verify. Two or more is reason to walk away.

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How to Verify the Landlord's Identity (Free Steps)

Verify a landlord by confirming their name, email, and phone all trace back to one consistent, real person. Do it free in three steps:

Step 1: Reverse-search their name, email, and phone. Enter whatever the landlord gave you into Lullar to scan 170+ platforms at once. A real landlord or property manager usually has a consistent footprint โ€” LinkedIn, a business page, older social accounts. A scammer typically has nothing, or accounts created days ago.

Step 2: Reverse image search the listing photos. Save the photos and run them through a reverse image search. If the same pictures appear on a real-estate site under a different agent, brokerage, or for-sale listing, the listing was stolen.

Step 3: Search the name plus "scam" or "complaint." Look up the landlord or rental company with the words "review," "complaint," and "scam" to surface other victims' reports.

How to Confirm They Actually Own the Property

Confirm property ownership by matching the landlord's name to public records for that exact address. Even a smooth, friendly lister is a scammer if their name isn't tied to the property.

  1. Look up the address on the county assessor or property-records site. Most U.S. counties publish the owner of record for free. The name on the deed should match โ€” or clearly connect to โ€” the person you're dealing with.
  2. Cross-check the owner's name. If the owner of record is "Maria Reyes" but you're texting "John" who says he's the landlord, ask how he's connected. A real property manager can explain; a scammer can't.
  3. Verify with a full people report. A name from public records is a starting point. A people-search report confirms the person's real name, current phone, and address history so you know the lister and the owner are the same human.

Spokeo compiles a person's real name, phone numbers, address history, and public records into one report โ€” so you can match the lister to the property owner before any deposit leaves your account.

Before You Pay: A Final Checklist

Run this checklist before sending any deposit on a Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, or Zillow rental:

CheckHow
Toured the actual unit in personNever pay before you (or a trusted local) see it
Landlord's name, email, phone are consistent and realReverse-search on Lullar
Listing photos aren't stolenReverse image search
Name matches the property owner of recordCounty records + Spokeo people report
Payment is traceable (no wire/gift card/crypto)Use a method with a paper trail; get a signed lease

If every box is checked, you can proceed with confidence. If any fails, treat it as a scam until proven otherwise โ€” and report it to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if a rental listing is a scam?

A listing is likely a scam if the rent is far below market, the landlord won't show the unit in person, you're pressured to pay a deposit fast, or they demand a wire transfer, gift cards, or crypto. Verify the lister first: reverse-search their name, email, and phone on Lullar, reverse image search the photos, and confirm their name matches the property owner in county records.

How can I verify a landlord before paying a deposit?

Confirm the landlord is a real person whose name, email, and phone all trace to one consistent identity. Search those details on Lullar to map their online footprint, then confirm they actually own the property by matching their name to county records and a people report. For a full name, phone, and address-history check, Spokeo compiles public records into one report.

How do I check if someone really owns the property they're renting?

Look up the address on your county assessor or property-records site, which publishes the owner of record for free. The owner's name should match the person you're dealing with. To confirm the lister and the owner are the same human, run the name through a people-search service like Spokeo to verify their real name and address history.

What payment methods are safe when renting?

Use payment methods that leave a paper trail, such as a check, ACH bank transfer, or credit card, and only after you've toured the unit and signed a lease. Wire transfers, gift cards, Zelle, Cash App, and cryptocurrency are favorites of scammers because they're nearly impossible to reverse. Never pay a deposit to hold a place you haven't seen.

Is it legal to look up a landlord before renting?

Yes. Searching publicly available information about a person you're about to do business with is legal, and Lullar only links to public profiles. Note that people-search reports like Spokeo cannot be used for tenant, employment, or credit screening of an applicant under the FCRA โ€” but verifying the identity of a landlord you're paying is a permissible personal-safety use.

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