Every letting agent wants the same thing.
A tenant who pays the rent on time, respects the property, and doesn’t turn the neighbours into a complaints department.
Simple enough.
Yet speak to almost any landlord or agent and you’ll hear the same horror stories:
- unpaid rent,
- property damage,
- anti-social behaviour,
- disappearing tenants,
- forged documents,
- and references that turned out to be worthless.
The question many ask afterwards is:
“Surely we can’t have been the first people this tenant has done this to?”
In many cases, they weren’t.
The warning signs existed long before the tenancy agreement was signed — they simply weren’t uncovered during referencing.
The Dangerous Illusion of “Passed Referencing”
Modern fraud has evolved.
We are no longer just dealing with the occasional altered payslip or exaggerated income.
Today, synthetic identities, AI-generated documents, fake utility bills, manipulated bank statements and fabricated landlord references are becoming increasingly sophisticated.
On the surface, everything appears legitimate.
The ID checks pass.
The documents look genuine.
The references respond positively.
But there is a critical problem:
Many referencing processes are built around validation, not verification.
And there is a huge difference between the two.
Validation vs Verification
Validation asks:
“Does this document look real?”
Verification asks:
“Can we independently prove this person, address, document and referee are genuine?”
That distinction matters enormously.
Because fraudsters understand how to create convincing documentation.
What they struggle to do is survive genuine independent verification.
Fake References Built on Fake Foundations
One of the growing concerns within the rental sector is the creation of entirely fabricated tenant profiles.
A false identity is supported by:
- synthetic or manipulated documents,
- a friendly referee posing as a landlord,
- temporary phone numbers,
- throwaway email addresses,
- and digitally generated paperwork.
Individually, each element may appear to “check out”.
Collectively, however, the entire application is built on fraudulent foundations.
This is where many agents unknowingly expose themselves.
If you only validate the information provided by the applicant, you risk authenticating a well-constructed lie.
Other Reasons for False Identities in the Lettings Market
The reference itself may not always be the primary objective of the fraudster.
A growing concern within the lettings sector is the use of genuine identities by individuals who do not hold a valid Right to Rent.
In these cases, the identity documents presented may appear entirely legitimate because they belong to a real person with valid permissions to rent property in the UK. However, the individual presenting those documents may not be the rightful owner of that identity.
This creates a dangerous false sense of compliance.
On the surface:
- the identity appears valid,
- the Right to Rent checks may initially pass,
- and the referencing process appears complete.
But underneath, the entire application may still be fraudulent.
For some individuals, obtaining a tenancy is not simply about securing accommodation. It can also be about establishing legitimacy, building a documented footprint, and creating the appearance of lawful residency.
The risk for agents and landlords is significant.
If a property is rented to someone without a valid Right to Rent, criminal penalties and substantial fines may still apply — even where the documentation initially appeared convincing.
Which is why genuine identity verification matters more than ever
The Solution: Independent Verification
The answer is not more paperwork.
It is better verification.
That means:
- verifying identity documents using genuine verification technology rather than basic validation tools,
- confirming the individual can genuinely be linked to the address provided,
- independently establishing that the referee is the legal owner or authorised landlord of the property,
- and ensuring communications are sent to verified contact details — not simply the details supplied by the applicant.
Because if you are relying solely on the phone number or email address given to you, there is every chance you are simply communicating with a friend helping support the deception.
Trust Needs Solid Foundations
Referencing should never be about creating a false sense of reassurance.
It should be about uncovering risk before keys are handed over.
Fraudsters are becoming more sophisticated, more organised and increasingly tech-enabled.
The good news is that verification technology is evolving too.
But agents must understand one critical point:
You cannot build good references on bad foundations.
For more information on how Simplified.ID can help and advise you on the best way to verify your tenants click the Get in touch button at the top of this page.