设为首页加入收藏
  • 首页
  • Start up
  • 当前位置:首页 >Start up >【】

    【】

    发布时间:2025-09-12 22:31:56 来源:都市天下脉观察 作者:Start up

    Latest

    AI

    Amazon

    Apps

    Biotech & Health

    Climate

    Cloud Computing

    Commerce

    Crypto

    Enterprise

    EVs

    Fintech

    Fundraising

    Gadgets

    Gaming

    Google

    Government & Policy

    Hardware

    Instagram

    Layoffs

    Media & Entertainment

    Meta

    Microsoft

    Privacy

    Robotics

    Security

    Social

    Space

    Startups

    TikTok

    Transportation

    Venture

    More from TechCrunch

    Staff

    Events

    Startup Battlefield

    StrictlyVC

    Newsletters

    Podcasts

    Videos

    Partner Content

    TechCrunch Brand Studio

    Crunchboard

    Contact Us

    Architectural details of modern apartment building.
    Image Credits:vkyryl (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
    Fintech

    This startup wants to help landlords rethink risk when screening potential tenants

    Mary Ann Azevedo 7:03 AM PDT · August 31, 2023

    It’s long been argued that relying on credit scores for things such as evaluating rental applications is an old-fashioned model that needs to be done away with.

    But the question of how to determine whether or not a rental applicant is truly a risk has remained.

    One proptech startup has made it its mission to offer landlords a more equitable way to screen residents, and verify their income. Founded by two former executives at a large Chicago-based institutional REIT, Rent Butter’s screening tool aims to level the playing field for people who may have fallen on hard times in the past but have managed to turn their finances around and yet still are penalized for long-ago mistakes or payment transgressions.

    Tom Raleigh was an attorney who was often involved in cases dealing with residents who were in arrears on rent, and Chris Rankin had worked on the company’s tech stack. In his previous role, Raleigh worked closely with residents, usually working together on court-ordered payments plans.

    He saw cases, for example, where hard-working single mothers found themselves in trouble because of a temporary blip in their financial estate and were worried about their long-term ability to get approved for rentals because of how long an eviction is considered public information and how long a late payment affects a person’s credit score.

    “While we represented the landlord, I almost became a mediator,” Raleigh told TechCrunch. “The majority of families going through evictions were good people with 2-3 months of bad financial health.”

    He recalls the case of one single mother who told him landlords looked at her credit score and eviction history and immediately turned her down.

    Techcrunch event

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    San Francisco | October 27-29, 2025 REGISTER NOW

    “And that’s when the light bulb went off,” Raleigh said. “It was like ‘there’s got to be better alternative data out there to help tenants apply for a more stable housing environment.”

    So in 2021, Raleigh and Rankin teamed up to start Rent Butter. Their goal was to create another way for residents to convey to potential landlords they were financially stable enough to be good tenants, and to give landlords a way to better screen applicants so they could see reduced risk, fraud and turnover.

    How it works

    Rent Butter works by connecting to an applicant’s bank account to give a leasing team access to assess them based on alternative data such as banking account information, rent payment history, an analysis of their credit behavior and income/expense information. The company argues that it can provide more than just a credit score; it claims it can reveal how that actual score is trending as well as provide insight into applicants’ credit and banking behavior. For example, if a credit score is going up steadily, that means the candidate is more likely to be a “safe” tenant. But if the number is trending downward, or the applicant has recently, say, had a surge in debt, then the tool alerts leasing teams to those facts.

    And now, the company has raised $3 million in a recent funding round led by RET Ventures’ ESG fund. The firm is backed by large multifamily real estate owners and operators who  collectively manage 2.6 million units in the U.S. 

    Rent Butter today has properties made up of 120,000 residential units — including apartment buildings, single-family homes and trailers — using its tool. These operators manage as few as 100 doors and as many as 50,000 doors.

    It essentially replaces companies’ native screening solution, Raleigh said, by plugging into existing systems.

    “Then landlords begin leasing to people they would normally turn away,” he added.

    Getting it right from the beginning

    Aaron Ru, principal at RET Ventures, said that his firm’s LPs — who are mostly llarge institutional owner/operators of multifamily and single family real estate. — are “frustrated by how static credit scores are.”

    “There is an increase in fraud because of how easy it is now to buy fraudulent financial documents or IDs. And then, evictions are increasingly difficult,” he said. “So if you get something wrong at the beginning of an application process, it’s very, very costly to undo. And so, we’ve spent a lot of time as a team looking at screening solutions over the past year.”

    The firm found that many are punitive, or didn’t necessarily align with RET’s incentives.

    “We really liked Rent Butter’s approach to addressing housing affordability and access,” Ru told TechCrunch. “By utilizing some of these advanced underwriting metrics, you can form a pretty complete picture of a renter’s financial health and I think that actually helps open the funnel and make it slightly wider…This gives our operators the granularity to really double click into and look into making decisions outside of just credit scores.”

    Want more fintech news in your inbox? Sign up for The Interchange here.

    • 上一篇:Remembering the startups we lost in 2022
    • 下一篇:Upside's cell

      相关文章

      • Airplane lands $32M in new cash to make it easier for companies to build internal dev tools
      • Anterior grabs $20M from NEA to expedite health insurance approvals with AI
      • Autobiographer's app uses AI to help you tell your life story
      • 72 hours left of the Disrupt early
      • African fintech unicorn Chipper Cash lays off about 12.5% of staff
      • Anterior grabs $20M from NEA to expedite health insurance approvals with AI
      • Adfin wants to fix bill payments for sole traders and small companies
      • MARS doubles down on India's Infra.Market with new $50M investment
      • How to launch a startup into a regulated market, according to Bradley Tusk
      • Lhoopa raises $80M to spur more affordable housing in the Philippines

        随便看看

      • Southeast Asia insurtech Igloo increases its Series B to $46M
      • Startup Battlefield 200 applications close tomorrow
      • Shaped raises $8M Series A and launches its self
      • Meet Brex, Google Cloud, Aerospace and more at Disrupt 2024
      • Pitch onstage at TC Sessions: Space 2022
      • Civic Renewables is rolling up residential solar installers to improve quality and grow the market
      • Deel acquires Hofy to build its own IT device management service
      • Tesla makes Musk best
      • Pitch Deck Teardown: Rokoko's $3M strategic extension deck
      • How (Re)vive grew 10x last year by helping retailers recycle and sell returned items
      • Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【】,都市天下脉观察   辽ICP备198741324484号sitemap