Many managers assume that as long as they apply the same strict rules to everyone – the consistency trap- they’re protected from fair housing trouble but the legal landscape is shifting.
By The Fair Housing Institute
In property management, it’s tempting to lean on zero-tolerance screening policies. They’re fast, efficient, and feel like a safe bet against discrimination claims.
But relying solely on an algorithm creates a real problem. When we prioritize a rigid “yes or no” over an actual conversation, we aren’t just being efficient—we’re often creating a legal liability and missing the human context that defines real risk. The challenge today isn’t just about who we let in, but how sophisticated and fair our process is for those we initially turn away.
The Illusion of Objective Safety
A common mistake in the industry is thinking that a blanket ban is a safe harbor.
Many managers assume that as long as they apply the same strict rules to everyone, they’re protected from fair housing trouble. However, the legal landscape is shifting. Regulators now look closely at the disparate impact of these neutral-sounding rules. For example, a policy that automatically rejects anyone with a criminal record might unintentionally hit certain protected groups much harder than others. By sticking to an inflexible standard, you might actually be turning a risk-management tool into a legal target.
Being a pro in this field means moving past the “set it and forget it” mindset of automated screening. We have to acknowledge that data has limits. A low credit score might come from a one-time medical emergency rather than a habit of not paying bills. A conviction from a decade ago might have zero bearing on how someone will behave as a neighbor today. When we refuse to look behind the numbers, we aren’t really protecting the property; we’re just ignoring the nuances that help us understand who a person actually is.
The Strategic Value of the Appeal
Moving from a simple “Yes/No” system to a real appeals process might feel like more paperwork, but it’s actually a smart business move. An individualized assessment shows that you’re making a good-faith effort to follow fair housing laws. By giving applicants a clear way to share their side—whether it’s evidence of rehabilitation or an explanation for a financial dip—you change the story from one of “rejection” to one of “due process.” If a decision is ever challenged, having a documented, person-centered rationale is your best defense.
Handling this well usually means tweaking how your team works. Instead of leaving it all to an algorithm, you might need a small review group or a compliance lead who knows how to look at the “whole person.” This human-in-the-loop model keeps the community safe while making sure the company isn’t wide open to biased claims. The goal is a process that is as rigorous in its empathy as in its standards, ensuring every denial is backed by a solid, defensible reason.
Fair Housing Month Special on YouTube
Also, we are happy to announce that, in honor of Fair Housing Month, The Fair Housing Institute will host a live event on YouTube focusing on HUD updates, emotional support animals, and the impact of AI in fair housing. It will be on April 1st at 2 p.m. e.s.t. Here is a link to register for the event and ask any questions you would like answered during the event. Please feel free to share with your organization!
Building Trust Through a Fair Process
At the end of the day, how you handle appeals is about procedural justice. When people feel they’ve been heard and their situation was actually considered, they are far less likely to walk away angry or file a formal complaint. Being transparent about why a decision was made and how someone can contest it builds massive professional credibility. It tells the market and the regulators that your company operates with integrity and actually understands its social and legal responsibilities.
The long-term value of ditching the “consistency trap” is a more resilient business. A management firm that gets the appeals process right can handle new laws and social changes without breaking a sweat. You stop being reactive to every new mandate and start leading the industry toward a smarter, more legally sound approach. That trust, built through a fair and human process, is the strongest protection your property can have.
About the author:
In 2005, The Fair Housing Institute was founded as a company with one goal: to provide educational and entertaining fair-housing compliance training at an affordable price at the click of a button.












FTC Seeks Comment On Potentially Unfair Rental Housing-Fees
The Federal Trade Commission has announced it is seeking written public comment on a notice of proposed rulemaking to address nationwide potentially unfair rental housing fees or deceptive fee practices in connection with rental housing.
As detailed in a Federal Register notice announcing an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the FTC is seeking written comments, including data, evidence, analyses and arguments, regarding rental housing fees and charges throughout a lease lifecycle, from application to moveout.
“Rental-pricing practices that are neither clear nor transparent undermine competition and harm consumers,” said Christopher Mufarrige, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “The Trump-Vance FTC is focused on addressing unlawful business conduct that obscures the actual cost of housing and undermines price competition.”
The failure to advertise the true total rent can limit consumers’ ability to make informed financial decisions, increasing their search costs and exposing them to other negative monetary consequences when they take on more rent than they can afford. These practices also may undermine competition by weakening the incentives of rental-housing providers who do advertise the true total rent.
The notice seeks comments on such topics as:
Unfair and deceptive rental housing fee practices violate federal law. In the past two years, the FTC has filed two cases challenging these fee practices by nationwide housing providers. Invitation Homes, the largest single-family home rental housing provider in the country, agreed to pay $48 million to settle FTC allegations that the company violated the FTC Act by, among other things, excluding mandatory monthly fees from the advertised rent.
Greystar Real Estate Partners, the largest residential rental property owner and manager in the nation, was ordered to change its fee disclosure practices and pay $23 million in consumer redress to settle a lawsuit by the FTC and the state of Colorado that alleged the company misrepresented the true cost of renting a property and excluded mandatory fees from the advertised rent.
Case-by-case enforcement, while essential, addresses only some aspects of the harmful fee practices in the rental housing industry. The notice announced this week explores whether a rule is needed to address hidden and misleading fees that inflate rent well beyond what is advertised and other problematic fee practices imposed throughout a lease lifecycle. It also would serve as a deterrent against those practices because it would allow the agency to seek civil penalties against violators and more easily obtain redress for harmed consumers.
Consumers can submit comments electronically for 30 days, ending April 11. Consumers also may submit comments in writing by following the instructions in the “Supplementary Information” section of the Federal Register notice.