Facebook Marketplace Rental Safety

Is it safe to rent from Facebook Marketplace?

Facebook Marketplace can have genuine rental adverts, but it can also be risky because listings may be copied, profiles can be fake, and scammers can pressure renters to pay before viewing. Use this guide before sending money.

Is Facebook Marketplace safe for renting?

It can be used safely, but you should treat Facebook Marketplace rental listings as higher-risk than listings from a verified letting agent or established rental platform. The main danger is not Facebook itself — it is that scammers can create convincing adverts, copy photos, use fake profiles, and ask for money before you have properly checked the property.

Best answer

Do not assume a Facebook rental is genuine. Check the listing, profile, photos, address, viewing option, payment request, and deposit terms before sending money.

Why Facebook Marketplace rentals can be risky

Research by Generation Rent found that many Facebook Marketplace rental listings in its UK sample appeared suspicious. In its analysis of 300 adverts, 56% appeared to be copied from other sites, and 74% contained at least one suspicious indicator. The indicators included new seller profiles, copied profile pictures, rent far below the area average, and photos lifted from other sites.

56% of sampled Facebook Marketplace rental listings appeared to be copied from other sites, according to Generation Rent.
74% of sampled listings contained at least one suspicious indicator, according to the same research.

Source: Generation Rent research published 6 November 2024.

What this means

It does not mean every Facebook rental is fake. It means you should treat Facebook rental listings as something to verify carefully, especially if the rent looks cheap or the advertiser wants quick payment.

Check the seller or advertiser profile

A Facebook profile can look real while still being used for a scam. Before paying, look carefully at the profile and ask who the person is.

1
Check profile age and activity. Be cautious with very new profiles, empty profiles, or profiles with little normal activity.
2
Check the profile photo. Look for stock images, influencer photos, stolen profile pictures, or images that appear elsewhere online.
3
Ask their role. Are they the landlord, letting agent, current tenant, housemate, property manager, or just advertising for someone else?
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Be careful if they move you off-platform quickly. Scammers often push renters to WhatsApp, text, or private messages so the platform has less visibility.

Check the rental listing itself

The listing should make sense for the area, price, property type, and photos. If anything looks too good to be true, slow down and compare it with other listings nearby.

Search the photos online. Copied photos may come from Rightmove, Zoopla, Booking.com, Airbnb, estate agent sites, or old adverts.
Compare the rent. Check similar rooms, flats, or houses in the same area. Very cheap rent is a common hook.
Ask for the full address. Before paying anything, you should know exactly which property the advert is for.
Ask for a viewing. In-person is best. A genuine live video viewing is better than only photos or pre-recorded clips.

Payment warnings on Facebook rental listings

The riskiest moment is usually when the advertiser asks for money. Do not let urgency stop you from checking.

High-risk payment signs

Be very cautious if you are asked to pay before viewing, pay through gift cards or crypto, send money to a different name, or pay immediately to “secure” the property.

  • “Send a deposit today or you’ll lose it.”
  • “I’m abroad but I can post the keys after payment.”
  • “Pay through friends and family.”
  • “Use gift cards, crypto, or money transfer.”
  • “No viewing until you pay.”
  • “The agent will contact you after payment.”
  • “The property is very cheap because I need someone quickly.”

Safer steps before renting through Facebook Marketplace

Safer signs

Clear full address, genuine viewing, identifiable landlord or agent, written payment terms, realistic rent, and no pressure to pay before checking.

Riskier signs

New or odd profile, copied-looking photos, cheap rent, no viewing, vague address, payment pressure, and unusual payment methods.

  1. Save screenshots of the advert, seller profile, photos, rent, and messages.
  2. Search the photos online to see if they appear on other websites.
  3. Ask for the full address before paying.
  4. Ask who the advertiser is and how they are connected to the property.
  5. View the property in person or by live video.
  6. Compare the rent with similar listings nearby.
  7. Ask for payment terms in writing.
  8. Do not pay by unsafe or hard-to-trace methods.
  9. Use the rental scam checker before sending money.

How to report a Facebook Marketplace rental scam

Facebook’s Help Centre says you can report a Marketplace scam by opening the listing, clicking or tapping the listing options, choosing “Report Listing”, and selecting “Scam”. On mobile, Facebook also says you can open your messages with the seller, tap the seller’s photo, tap “Report”, then choose “Scam”. Meta’s marketplace safety page says suspicious activity should be reported.

Before reporting, save evidence

Take screenshots of the listing, profile, messages, payment requests, phone numbers, email addresses, and any bank details before the advert disappears.

If you have already sent money, contact your bank or payment provider quickly and report the fraud through the official reporting route for your country. Citizens Advice says Report Fraud can provide a crime reference number, which may be useful when telling your bank you have been scammed. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Copy-and-paste message for a Facebook rental advert

Send this before paying, sharing documents, or moving off-platform.

Hi, I’m interested in the property you listed on Facebook Marketplace. Before I send any money or personal documents, could you please confirm: 1. The full property address 2. Your full name and whether you are the landlord, letting agent, property manager, current tenant, or advertiser 3. Whether you have permission to rent or advertise the property 4. Whether I can view the property in person or by live video 5. The monthly rent and exactly which bills are included 6. The deposit amount and how it will be protected 7. Whether any holding deposit is required, what it reserves, and whether it is refundable 8. The tenancy type, start date, and notice period 9. The official payment details and what any payment is for 10. Whether you can provide written confirmation before any payment is made Thank you. I just want to make sure everything is clear and properly verified before moving forward.
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This guide provides general information only. It cannot verify a Facebook Marketplace listing, seller, property, payment request, or tenancy for you, and it is not legal or financial advice.

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