The direct answer
Direct answer: yes, especially once discharged
If you’re searching this because you’ve been denied or you’re worried about applying, here’s what actually happens in Texas: most communities run a credit check. The question is what they do with the results. Some use a hard cutoff (below X score, auto-deny). Others use conditional-approval bands and weigh the full picture — income, rental history, collections type, and time since any issue.
We’re a licensed Texas apartment locator (TREC #9006179) with 15+ years of relationships with property managers across Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio. We match renters with credit and background challenges to Texas communities that will actually approve them.
What it actually means
Why discharged Ch. 7 reads as a resolved/clean slate to some PMCs
Discharge paperwork and matching approach
The next step for renters in this situation.
How Texas communities handle it
Texas property managers use a mix of screening vendors — TransUnion SmartMove, Experian RentBureau, RealPage, AppFolio, NCAC, and LeasingDesk. Each vendor surfaces different information, and each PMC weighs it differently.
The reason people burn $50-$75 per rejected application is that the “no credit check apartments” search returns generic pages that don’t explain the mechanics. This page explains them.
For the broader picture on renting after chapter 7 bankruptcy, see our bankruptcy or the related guides below.
What to do next
If you’re weighing whether to apply somewhere or you’re afraid of another rejection, don’t guess. We’ll tell you in 2-4 business hours which Texas communities will approve your specific situation. Free to you — communities pay us the referral fee from their advertising budgets.
Related reading: bankruptcy · chapter 7 vs chapter 13 renting