A practical guide

How to rent in Las Vegas with an eviction on your record

An eviction isn’t a permanent rental death sentence. Here’s what actually happens when you apply, what landlords look at, and how to give yourself the best shot.

First, the good news

Evictions feel permanent. They aren’t. In Las Vegas alone, thousands of renters every year find housing after an eviction \u2014 including at our two communities. The key is knowing which landlords actually consider your application and which ones auto-reject you in the screening software before a human sees it.

Corporate complexes \u2014 the ones with leasing office staff behind plexiglass and a branded uniform \u2014 almost always auto-reject any eviction. Their screening services (RentGrow, SafeRent, LeasingDesk) use thresholds set by corporate HQ. A human never reads your explanation.

Private owners and smaller management companies work differently. We actually read what you write. We look at the whole picture \u2014 how long ago, what happened, what\u2019s changed. That\u2019s where your chance lives.

What actually disqualifies you

Short list. Longer than people think, but still finite:

  • Unpaid balance to the same management company. If you still owe the landlord you’re applying to, that’s a no.
  • Income doesn’t cover rent. Most landlords want 2.5\u20133x monthly rent in gross income. No eviction waives this.
  • Recent violent or drug felonies. Most landlords run background checks. Some offenses are automatic denials under insurance requirements.
  • Dishonesty on the application. Lying about the eviction is worse than the eviction itself. Always disclose.

That’s it. The eviction itself, alone, isn’t on this list.

What to prepare before you apply

Every document you bring makes you harder to reject. Aim for three things:

1. Proof of stable income

Two recent pay stubs. Or an offer letter if you just started. Self-employed? Bring six months of bank statements. On SSI/SSDI? The award letter. Mix sources if you have to \u2014 W-2 job plus gig work plus roommate contribution is fine.

2. A written explanation

One page, handwritten or typed. What happened: medical emergency, job loss, bad relationship, COVID-era shutdown. What’s changed: new job, left the situation, paid off debts, moved cities. Landlords read these. They matter more than people think.

3. Current references

A roommate, a parent whose couch you’ve been on, an employer, a caseworker. Anyone who’ll pick up the phone and vouch for your stability. Private owners actually call these. Bring three with names, numbers, and relationships.

Private landlords vs. corporate complexes

If your rental history has a hiccup, private beats corporate almost every time. Here’s why it matters where you apply:

Corporate complex

  • Automated screening (RentGrow, SafeRent)
  • Hard thresholds, no exceptions
  • No human reads your explanation
  • $50\u2013$100 non-refundable app fee per adult
  • Leasing staff can’t override corporate rules

Private owner (us)

  • Owner reads every application personally
  • Full context: income, story, references
  • Flexible on deposit in edge cases
  • Section 8 vouchers welcome, no fee
  • Direct conversation, no runaround

Scams that target evicted renters

Desperation attracts predators. Watch for these:

  • Upfront “application fees” via Zelle or Venmo. Legit landlords don’t do this. Pay by card or check through a company.
  • “Owner out of state, ship keys by mail.” Classic craigslist scam. Always tour the unit in person, or over video call with someone physically there.
  • Rents way below market. A 1BR in Las Vegas for $450? It’s bait. Check comps on apartments.com or zillow.com first.
  • Guaranteed approval for $199. No one can guarantee approval. These are lead-selling scams or outright theft.

How we handle it at Vegas Value Living

Owner-operated, two Las Vegas communities, and we’ve approved hundreds of tenants with evictions or broken leases over the years. Here’s our actual process:

  1. You apply online or call. Takes about two minutes.
  2. We run a basic background & eviction check. No screening algorithm rejects you automatically.
  3. If something comes up, we call or text you to talk about it. No anxiety, no ghosting.
  4. Approval decision usually within 24 hours. Move-in within a few days once the unit’s ready.

Read the full details on our second chance leasing page, or jump straight to the application.

FAQ

Can I actually rent in Las Vegas with an eviction on my record?

Yes, but not from every landlord. Big corporate complexes auto-reject evictions during screening. Private owners and smaller management companies — like Vegas Value Living — look at the full picture: income, how long ago the eviction was, and what’s changed since. We place hundreds of tenants with evictions every year.

How long does an eviction stay on my record in Nevada?

Evictions typically stay on your tenant screening record for seven years. Nevada court records remain public indefinitely, but most tenant screening services weigh older evictions less heavily. An eviction from 2020 hurts much less than one from last month.

Do I have to pay the old landlord before I can rent again?

Not legally — but paid-off judgements look better. If you still owe back rent or fees, some landlords (not us) require proof of payment or a payment plan before approval. We’ll discuss your situation case-by-case.

What documents will help my application?

Anything that shows stability since the eviction: recent pay stubs, employment letter, a current landlord reference (even a friend you’ve rented a room from), bank statements showing consistent deposits, or a Section 8 voucher if you have one. Written explanation of circumstances helps too.

Should I be honest about the eviction on my application?

Yes. Always. Background checks will catch it anyway, and landlords who reject lies are worse than landlords who reject evictions. Honesty up front saves everyone time and often improves your approval odds.

Will I need a higher security deposit?

Sometimes. At Vegas Value Living, the standard deposit is one month’s rent and negotiable. For some applicants we ask for a slightly larger deposit — always disclosed upfront. Section 8 voucher holders follow different rules.

Are there scams targeting renters with evictions?

Unfortunately yes. Watch for: up-front fees before seeing a unit, pressure to wire money, properties priced way below market, listings that redirect to sketchy third-party payment pages, and anyone asking for Zelle/Venmo deposits before a lease. Always tour in person or via video before paying anything.

Ready to apply?

Prior eviction? Broken lease? Tell us about it \u2014 we\u2019ll tell you honestly if we can help.