Fair Credit Reporting Act. Neither the federal nor the state Fair Credit Reporting Act prohibit the reporting of rental payment history to consumer reporting agencies (CRAs). The inclusion of such history in the credit reports that these agencies generate is also not prohibited. No federal law currently requires landlords to report rental payments of any sort to any CRA.
There are two states with laws concerning the reporting of rental payment information by landlords to CRAs:
Rent Regulation. The Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RLTA) and Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act (MHLTA) establish rights and duties for both tenants and landlords such as conditions for eviction and termination of the lease, notice requirements, allowable provisions within lease agreements, and the handling of security deposits. Washington does not require landlords to report rental payment information to any CRA.
Upon request of a current or prospective tenant, landlords subject to either the RLTA or the MHLTA will be required to submit documentation of a tenant's timely rent payments to CRA's. Landlords are not obligated to report late payments.
Rental Payment Reporting. If requested, landlords must submit documentation of on-time rental payments to at least one of the following two types of CRAs:
Landlords must keep records sufficient to demonstrate that they have reported tenant's rental payment information as requested, and they must provide documentation of this reporting to the tenant upon request. Landlords are not required to report late or missed rental payments.
Notice to Tenants. Landlords must provide written notice to existing or perspective tenants that they can request to have their on-time rent payments reported to a CRA. The notice provided by the landlord must include the following:
Requests from Tenants. Any time during a current lease or tenancy month-to-month, a tenant can request that a landlord begin reporting their rental payment information. The request must:
Termination of Landlord's Duty to Report. If a tenant fails to pay their rent on time they are deemed to have provided notice that they no longer wish to have their rental payment information reported, and the landlord's duty to report such information is immediately terminated. If a tenant provides notice in this manner they are not eligible to have their rental payment information reported again in their current lease for six months.
A landlord's duty to report rental payment information terminates automatically at the end of a lease, or when a lease reverts by default to a tenancy month-to-month without prior agreement of the parties.