This toolkit was created to provide fair housing guidance for formerly incarcerated individuals as well as family members and professionals advocating for those impacted by the criminal legal system. Many formerly incarcerated individuals face continued penalties post-incarceration by being excluded from housing based upon their criminal records. This toolkit is meant to provide information on fair housing rights and resources that can assist in navigating barriers to finding housing.
This toolkit is based on fair housing guidance that is valid throughout the country. Please note that our agency can only assist clients in Cuyahoga and Lorain counties. If you require fair housing assistance outside of those counties, you can find your local fair housing center here. If you cannot find a fair housing center in your region, fill out this form instead
The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing based on membership in groups called protected classes. These classes include race, color, national origin, religion, sex, family status, and disability. While federal law does not prohibit criminal background screening, The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released guidance about how the Fair Housing Act applies to housing policies with regard to criminal background checks.
Criminal background checks are often used as screening criteria for rental housing to determine qualified applicants. For those with criminal records, these screenings have become a barrier to obtaining housing. Many formerly incarcerated individuals, who have paid their debt to society, face continued penalties outside of the courts by being excluded from much of the housing market. HUD recognizes racial and ethnic disparities in the criminal legal system including disproportionate and unequal rates of arrests and convictions, and harsher sentencing of African Americans and Latinx populations in particular. The result of this disparity is a disproportionate burden on these protected classes, which can be a violation of the Fair Housing Act. Therefore, HUD has released guidance to address this housing obstacle.
In 2016, HUD issued guidance on applying Fair Housing Act Standards to the use of criminal records screening in housing‐related transactions. In 2022, HUD issued a memo, which further clarifies its 2016 guidance on this topic and even recommends that private housing providers avoid using criminal history to screen tenants for housing.
This guidance prohibits:
Further, a landlord must:
Individuals can legally be denied housing if their recent criminal record makes them dangerous and a risk to other tenants or neighbors. The denial must be based on reliable evidence and not be hypothetical or speculative. Denials also:
HUD regulations governing some federally‐assisted housing require two permanent bans: applicants with a lifetime requirement to register as a sex offender, and applicants convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine on federally‐assisted property.
Learn more about appealing housing denials based on criminal records here.