If you pay your rent on time each month, you could stand to gain from rent payment reporting, especially since 35% of your credit score is based on your payment history. If you’re looking for a way to boost your credit score or just want credit for making your rent payments on time, there are some options for reporting rent payments to the credit bureaus.

Check With Your Landlord

Your landlord already may report rent payments to the credit bureaus using a service that handles the process. RentBureau partners with Experian. Esusu and Zingo partner with Equifax. Zego reports to both Experian and TransUnion. Timely rent payments will help boost your credit score if your landlord reports them, but late payments can have a negative impact on your score. Credit bureaus don’t share information with each other, so rent payments reported through some services won’t necessarily appear on all three credit reports.

Use a Credit Card To Pay Your Rent

While your rent payments won’t be listed as a separate tradeline on your credit report, using your credit card for your rent still can boost your credit score. Check to see whether your landlord accepts credit card payments, and note any service fees that might be charged for using a credit card. If you’re using a rewards credit card to pay your rent, you can earn points or cash back on your rent payments. When you use a credit card to pay your rent, make sure to pay off your full balance just as if you were paying rent. That’s the best way to stay out of debt, improve your credit score, and get the full benefit of making timely rent payments.

Use a Rent Reporting Service

There are several companies that will report rent payments on your behalf. Monthly fees vary between services, and some charge an initial enrollment fee to get started. In some cases, your landlord may have to verify your rent payments for them to be included in your credit report. Note that even when rent payments are included in your credit report, they may not be included in your credit score calculation.

Rental Kharma: Adds up to six months of past rent payments to your credit report. The registration fee is $50, the monthly charge is $8.95, and you can add a spouse or roommate for a $25 one-time fee or add $5 monthly to your subscription. Your entire rental history at your current address is included, and there is no credit check for reporting your rent to TransUnion.Rent Reporters: Has a sign-up fee of $94.95 and charges $9.95 for monthly credit bureau reporting as of March 2022. You can also choose from an annual plan for the sign-up fee plus $7.95 per month. Once you sign up, Rent Reporters verifies your rental history with your landlord and then reports the tradeline to the credit bureaus. The service includes a copy of your credit score. Rent Reporters reports to TransUnion.Rock the Score: Verifies your rent payments with your landlord each month and updates your credit score with your payment information. You’ll pay $48 to enroll in the service and $6.95 each month for ongoing reporting as of March 2022. If you need a 24-month rental history, you can purchase a one-time report for $65. Rock the Score reports to TransUnion and Equifax.

Making Rent Payments

If you enroll in a rent reporting service, make sure you understand whether you’ll continue to pay your rent directly to your landlord or whether you’ll make payments to the service provider. Pay your rent on time each month even when it’s not reported to the credit bureaus. Late payments can lead to an eviction that could ultimately land on your credit report through a collection or judgment. At that point, the late rent payments hurt your credit score rather than help it.