Glossary · Definition

What is a Broken Lease?

A broken lease occurs when a tenant moves out before the agreed-upon lease end date without legal cause or landlord permission. Broken leases appear on rental history reports for 7 years and complicate future apartment applications, but many Denver buildings will approve applicants with broken lease history if documented properly.

Full Definition

A broken lease is when a renter ends their lease before the contractual end date without the landlord's consent or a legal cause (like military deployment under SCRA, or unsafe housing conditions). Most leases include penalties for breaking them — typically 1-2 months' rent owed, plus loss of security deposit.

Once a lease is broken, the property management company can report it to credit bureaus and tenant screening services (RentBureau, CoreLogic SafeRent, Experian RentBureau). It remains on the report for 7 years.

The screening report flag doesn't permanently block you from renting — but it does require strategy. Buildings that work with broken-lease applicants typically require an explanation letter, proof the balance was paid, current strong income, and a willingness to pay a higher security deposit.

How a Broken Lease Works in Denver Specifically

Denver metro has many B-class workforce apartment communities that work with broken-lease applicants — concentrated in Aurora, Thornton, Westminster, Lakewood, and Federal Heights. Juan David maintains a regular rotation of ~25 broken-lease-friendly Denver communities and bilingually handles the explanation letter and application process.

Need Help Navigating This?

Juan David Rodriguez at Denver Apartment Pro is a bilingual (English/Spanish) apartment locator serving the Denver metro area. The service is free for renters because apartment communities pay the commission. Call, text, or WhatsApp (720) 560-2740.

Related Terms