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How to rent an apartment in NYC with no credit history

If you have little or no US credit history, renting in New York can feel like a wall: landlords ask for a credit score you don't have yet. The good news — you have more options and more legal protection than you think. Here's the practical playbook.

Why "no credit" is so common in NYC

About 1 in 5 New York City adults is credit-invisible or has a thin file — newcomers to the US, international students, young renters, and cash earners. It doesn't mean you're a bad tenant. It means the credit system simply hasn't recorded your reliability yet.

Prove reliability another way

A missing score isn't the same as being unqualified. Landlords ultimately want confidence you'll pay. You can show that with:

  • Bank-verified rent history — proof you've paid rent on time, pulled straight from your bank.
  • Verified income — from your bank or payroll, showing you can afford the rent.
  • Landlord references — ideally ones a landlord can trust are genuine.
  • Identity verification — confirming you are who you say you are, often without a Social Security number.

A CertRent profile packages exactly these into one link you can share for free — a way to say "here's my track record" when you don't have a score.

Know your rights

  • If you use a housing voucher that covers the rent, a landlord generally cannot reject you over a credit score (source-of-income protection).
  • Application fees are capped at $20, and must be waived if you bring your own recent check — see our fee-waiver guide.
  • You can't be blacklisted just for having appeared in housing court.

Other things that help

  • Offer a guarantor or a guarantor-service — but check the alternatives first.
  • Show savings. Several months of rent in the bank reassures landlords.
  • Start building credit now — see how renters build credit.

You don't need a perfect score to rent well in New York. You need to prove you're reliable — and you can.

Ready to put this to work?

Build a verified renter profile free, or create a landlord account to view one.