How to find a good mid-term rental, ask the right questions, and steer clear of scams along the way.
Finding a place for a few weeks or a few months should feel exciting, not stressful. Most hosts are honest people renting out a real home. A small number aren't, and they tend to target renters moving fast or far from home. These five rules prevent the large majority of rental scams on their own.
No deposit, no holding fee, no application fee until you know the listing and host are real.
Real rentals don't ask for these. Scammers like them because the money can't be reversed.
Visit in person, or ask the host to show you the unit live on a video call. A pre-recorded clip isn't the same.
A signed agreement with the address, dates, price, and what's included.
If the deal seems too good, or the host is rushing you, slow down. A real home will still be there tomorrow.
A good host is glad you asked. A scammer gets vague, changes the subject, or pushes you to pay first. How a host answers these tells you most of what you need to know.
You should never have to pay just to view a place or submit an application. A common scam charges a small “application” or “background check” fee, takes the money, and disappears. Real screening, when there is any, comes after you've seen the place, through a process you can verify.
Scams tend to follow the same patterns. If you see two or more in the same listing, walk away.
Take these in order. Each step builds a little more trust before any money changes hands.
Find the address on a map, compare the price with similar homes, and reverse-image-search the photos.
Notice how quickly and clearly they reply. Vague or dodged answers are warning signs.
Visit in person, or ask for a live video walkthrough of the actual unit, not a clip recorded earlier.
Check the address, dates, total price, what's included, and the refund terms. All in writing.
Use a method you can trace, to a name that matches the agreement, and keep every receipt.
Keep the lease, receipts, and message history. If anything goes wrong later, this protects you.
Tick every box before you send any money. If you can't tick them all, don't pay yet.
Do the homework once and the rest of your stay gets easy. A little patience up front is what makes a great rental feel effortless.