Section 8 Screening Rules
Section 8 screening rules explain how landlords can screen Housing Choice Voucher applicants using lawful, consistent criteria that focus on tenancy behavior rather than voucher status.
What Section 8 screening means
Section 8 screening does not mean lower standards. It means applying the same rental criteria to voucher holders while accounting for how rent and income are calculated.
- Voucher status alone cannot be used to deny an applicant where source of income protections apply
- Landlords may screen for rental history, eviction history, and lease compliance
- Income calculations must reflect the tenant portion of rent
- Rules must be written and applied consistently
Source of income considerations
Many states and cities protect source of income, which includes housing vouchers. This changes how screening decisions must be framed and documented.
- You cannot refuse an applicant solely because they use a voucher where protected
- You may apply neutral screening rules that are not voucher specific
- All requirements must be related to tenancy and lease performance
- Policies should be reviewed for local and state alignment
For broader compliance context, review Fair Housing Screening Rules.
What you can screen for
Rental history
Prior lease compliance, payment patterns, and landlord references may be reviewed using consistent standards.
Eviction history
Eviction filings and outcomes may be considered based on written lookback periods and outcomes.
Credit behavior
Credit history may be reviewed for lease related risk rather than overall score alone.
Occupancy standards
Neutral occupancy limits and household composition rules may be applied equally.
Income calculations for voucher tenants
Screening income for Section 8 applicants focuses on the tenant portion of rent rather than the full contract rent.
- Confirm approved voucher amount and bedroom size
- Calculate the tenant rent portion
- Apply your rent to income ratio to the tenant portion
- Document calculations clearly
Common mistakes landlords make
- Using voucher status as a screening shortcut
- Applying different standards to voucher holders
- Failing to adjust income calculations properly
- Not documenting reasons for denial
These risks are avoidable with clear written rules. See Tenant Screening Criteria.
Need help with Section 8 screening?
We help landlords design Section 8 screening rules that align with local law, protect owners, and remain consistent across all applicants.
Related screening pages
Section 8 screening FAQs
Can I deny a Section 8 applicant?
Can I require higher standards for voucher tenants?
Do I screen the housing authority?
Own rentals in Florida and need help buying or selling investment property? Visit Golden Hour Real Estate. Need financing for rental properties? Visit 360 Mortgage. Need insurance guidance for rentals? Visit Henson Agency.
