If you are running ads that contain these words, you will likely be fined $100,000 or more and lose your rental home.
You need to make sure your ads are not violating the law.
You could own an apartment complex or a home. It does not matter. You still need to follow Fair Housing laws when running ads for your rental.
You can not post an ad for your home that is discriminatory. Section 804c of the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. 3604c says, “…it is unlawful to make, print, or publish, or cause to be made, printed, or published, any notice, statement, or advertisement, with respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling, that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.”
Whether you run ads on a website, Craigslist, or in printed magazines or classifieds in a newspaper, you must stay away from using discriminatory wording.
People have been taken to court and fined $5,000 for every discriminatory ad they ran.
Do not refer to a persons skin color and do not use the words, “white”, “black”, “Hispanic”, “colored home”, and “no Hispanics”. Don’t even try to work race into the advertising of your home.
Religion should never be used in your ads. It is not legal to use words like “Christians only” or “no Jews”.
If your rental home is in a good area of town or a good neighborhood use the wording “desirable neighborhood”. Desirable is open to the interpretation of the reader and is therefore not viewed as discriminatory.
Do not discriminate against individuals with a disability. It is NOT ok to use the phrase “no wheelchairs” or “handicap people need not apply”. Advertisements describing the conduct required of residents (“non-smoking”, “sober”) do not violate the Fair Housing Act. Advertisements containing descriptions of accessibility features are lawful (wheelchair ramp).
Children, the number of children, or parents should not be mentioned in your ad. It is not legal to say “no children” and “adults only”. In 2007, a California Housing Rights Center took a landlord to court for not allowing children in his apartment complex. The Housing Rights Center sent in undercover people posing as prospects. The court fined the landlord more than $120,000.
Do not state an explicit preference, limitation or discrimination based on familial status in your ads. Ads may not contain limitations on the number or ages of children, or state a preference for adults, couples or singles. Advertisements describing the properties (two bedroom, cozy, family room), services and facilities (no bicycles allowed) or neighborhoods (quiet streets) are not facially discriminatory and do not violate the Fair Housing Act.
Fair Housing regulations do not just govern your ads. They also govern how you screen tenants, your rental application, and how you treat your tenant the entire time they stay in your rental home.