Home Living in the USA Finding Housing in the USA as a Foreigner
Living in the USA Updated April 2026

Finding Housing in the USA as a Foreigner

Renting in the USA is famously difficult without credit history. Here is how foreigners find apartments.

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The Challenge

The average US landlord requires: proof of income (3x the monthly rent), US credit score, SSN, previous landlord references, and a security deposit (1-2 months). Foreigners arriving without any of these face an obstacle course.

Main Platforms

  • Zillow — biggest site; rentals + purchases
  • Apartments.com — dedicated apartment search
  • StreetEasy — NYC specific, best in class
  • Trulia — similar to Zillow
  • Craigslist — still used, scam-prone but fast
  • Facebook Marketplace — direct landlord listings
  • Airbnb (30+ days) — short-term while searching
  • Furnished Finder — originally for travel nurses, now broader

Required Documents

  • Passport or ID
  • Proof of employment or income
  • Bank statements (3-6 months)
  • References from previous landlords
  • US credit report or equivalent
  • SSN or ITIN (often requested, not always legally required)

The Credit Problem

The US credit system (FICO score) takes 3-6 months to build and is needed to rent most apartments. New arrivals have no score, which landlords treat like a red flag. Options:

  • Use Nova Credit — translates your home country's credit history to the US equivalent. Accepted by many landlords.
  • Offer 3-6 months rent upfront — most landlords accept this
  • Find a US co-signer / guarantor — family, friends, employer
  • Use a guarantor service — Insurent or The Guarantors (pay 75-110% of a month's rent as a fee)

Workarounds

  • Sublet — take over someone else's lease for 1-6 months
  • Corporate housing — furnished, short-term, no credit needed. Expensive.
  • Co-living — Common, Outsite, SpareRoom — turnkey, community-focused
  • Room rental — cheaper, faster approval from individual owners
  • Relocation services — Anyplace, Nomad Pass — short-term furnished

Short-Term Options

Most new arrivals start with an Airbnb or corporate apartment for 1-2 months while searching for permanent housing. Budget $2,500-5,000 for this first month depending on city.

Lease Basics

  • Security deposit: 1-2 months (limits vary by state)
  • First month's rent: Due at signing
  • Broker fee: 10-15% of annual rent in NYC only; rare elsewhere
  • Lease length: Usually 12 months; 6-month and month-to-month exist
  • Utilities: Sometimes included, often not
  • Pet fees: $200-500 deposit + $25-75/month
  • Renters insurance: Often required, $15-25/month

By City

  • NYC — hardest. Broker fees, 40x income rule, StreetEasy. Start with a sublet.
  • LA — easier but spread out. Need a car to search. Zillow works.
  • SF — expensive and competitive but straightforward process
  • Chicago — easier and cheaper than coastal cities
  • Miami — fast-paced, lots of short-term rentals
  • Austin — fastest-moving market, call immediately after listing
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Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner rent an apartment in the USA?

Yes, but most landlords want proof of income, US credit history and a social security number. Workarounds include offering larger deposits, a co-signer, or going through corporate housing.