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Best free property management software for small landlords

Updated on Jun 30, 2026

Published on Jun 30, 2026

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Summary

Free property management software can cover the basics: listing your rental, screening applicants, collecting rent. But every platform draws the line somewhere different. Some paywall income verification or lease tools behind $149–$240/year subscriptions. Others skip compliance automation entirely, leaving you to manage steps that carry real legal liability. This guide compares four platforms on what their free plans actually include, where the hidden costs surface, and which gaps create the most risk. Trusted by more than 4 million users, RentSpree is the only free platform in this comparison that includes Zillow listing syndication and automated adverse action notices, so you can reach the largest tenant audience from day one and stay compliant without tedious manual steps

If you're managing a rental for the first time, or running a small portfolio on tight margins, paying $50 or more per month for property management software doesn't make sense. The good news is that genuinely free platforms exist. The catch is that "free" means different things depending on the platform. Some cover the full workflow but leave out features that protect you from compliance risk and income fraud. Others cover the basics but lock essential tools behind paid plans you'll hit within your first lease cycle.

This guide compares four platforms (RentSpree, TurboTenant, Baselane, and Innago) on what you actually get for free. Not marketing-page feature lists, but the details that determine whether the platform helps you find reliable tenants, stay compliant, and avoid the mistakes that cost more than any subscription.

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What "free" actually costs

Even free platforms have a revenue model. Understanding where the money comes from tells you where the limitations, paywalls, and risks will show up. Four things to watch for.

Subscription paywalls on features you'll need soon. Some platforms let you list a rental and screen applicants for free, but require a paid plan for income verification or accounting tools. If the tools that help you find reliable, qualified tenants (like income verification) sit behind a paid tier, or compliance protections aren't offered at all, the "free" label doesn't tell the full story. 

Per-applicant and per-transaction fees that add up more than you'd expect. Screening fees, typically paid by the applicant, not the landlord, range from $30 to $55 across the platforms in this guide. ACH rent collection fees range from free to $3 per transaction. 

Listing distribution gaps that cost you vacancy time. Finding qualified tenants starts with getting your listing in front of the right audience. Some platforms syndicate your rental to Zillow, Realtor.com, Trulia, and other major sites from a single post at no cost. Others limit syndication to smaller networks or skip it entirely, which means you're either posting manually to each site or missing the audiences that matter most. Every week a unit sits vacant is lost rent you can't recover, so the reach your platform provides on its free plan is one of the most important cost factors to evaluate.

Income fraud protection that's missing or paywalled. Confirming whether an applicant can actually afford rent is one of the most important steps in the screening process, and the method you use matters.

Income verification has traditionally meant reviewing uploaded documents: pay stubs, bank statements, tax returns. The problem is that these documents are increasingly easy to falsify with widely available editing tools. Bank-verified income verification pulls earnings data directly from the applicant's bank account through a secure connection, which is significantly harder to fake. Some platforms offer this on any plan as a low-cost add-on. Others lock it behind a $199/year subscription.

Compliance gaps that carry real legal liability. This is the cost that won't appear on any pricing page, and it's the one most likely to catch a first-time landlord off guard.

Adverse action notices are a legal requirement that many landlords don't learn about until they've already missed the step. Any time you deny a rental applicant based on information in a screening report, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires you to send a formal written notice explaining why. Missing this step can result in up to $1,000 in statutory damages per violation. Some platforms automate this directly from the screening dashboard. Others provide a sample letter and leave the drafting, the required disclosures, and the delivery to you. That's a meaningful difference in legal exposure, especially for a landlord who may not know the obligation exists.

How these free plans compare

All four platforms in this guide offer some version of listing, screening, and rent collection at no cost to the landlord. The table below focuses on the features where the free plans diverge, because those are the details that determine whether the platform protects you or leaves gaps you'll have to manage yourself.

RentSpree TurboTenant Baselane Innago
User base 4 million+ 1 million+ 50,000+ Not disclosed
Listing creation Yes (free) Yes (free) Not available Yes (free)
Zillow syndication Included free Not available Not available Not available
Other listing syndication Apartments.com, Rent.com, Trulia, & more Realtor.com, Rent.com, and others None Doorsteps, Realtor.com, Zumper
Adverse action notices Automated (free) Do it yourself Do it yourself Do it yourself
Conditional acceptance (New Jersey, Detroit MI, Washington D.C., etc.) Supported Not supported Not supported Not supported
Rent collection Free ($3 ACH fee; waived with Landlord PRO) Free ($2 ACH fee; waived with Pro) Free (free ACH to Baselane accounts) Free ($2 ACH fee)
Leases and e-sign Landlord PRO ($6.99/mo) Essentials plan ($149/yr) Included (free) Included (free)
Bookkeeping Basic free; advanced with Landlord PRO Pro plan ($199/yr) Included free; advanced with Smart ($20/mo) Included (free)
Trustpilot rating 4.6 (960+ reviews) 4.4 (580+ reviews) 4.8 (400+ reviews) 4.8 (445 reviews)

What screening actually costs

Every platform in this guide offers screening on its free plan, but what's bundled at the base price varies significantly. Some platforms include credit, criminal, and eviction reports in one flat fee. Others charge for each report separately. The table below breaks down exactly what you're paying for.

RentSpree TurboTenant Baselane Innago
Basic report cost $39.99 $55 on free plan; $45 on Pro plan $24.99 $30–$35
Credit report Included Included Included Included
Criminal history Included Included +$5 Included
Eviction history Included Included +$10 Included
Income verification +$10 (bank-verified) Requires $199/yr Pro plan +$10 (bank-verified) +$10 (bank, payroll, or doc)
Report speed Most within 2 hours 1–3 days Minutes Typically instant
Data sources TransUnion Rent Butter Equifax TransUnion + Experian
Full report with income verification (free plan) $49.99 Not available on free plan $49.99 $40–45

Most platforms let landlords pass the report fee to the applicant. Some jurisdictions prohibit this. Check your local rules before doing so.

RentSpree

RentSpree is the only free platform in this comparison that covers both the features landlords need (listing syndication, screening, rent collection) and the protections most don't think about until something goes wrong (automated compliance notices, bank-verified income access, conditional acceptance).

Find tenants faster with Zillow reach. Every week a unit sits vacant, you're losing rent you can't recover. RentSpree syndicates your listing automatically to Zillow, Trulia, Apartments.com, Redfin, Rent.com, and other major listing sites from a single post, all on the free plan. None of the other platforms in this guide syndicate to Zillow, which means you'd either need to post there separately or miss the largest rental search audience in the country.

Screen with built-in compliance protection. Tenant screening on RentSpree is powered by TransUnion, and most reports return within two hours. When you need to deny an applicant, adverse action notices are automated directly from the dashboard on every plan, including the free tier. RentSpree is also the only platform here that supports conditional acceptance, the two-step screening process before you can access criminal background details. Conditional acceptance is required for landlords in jurisdictions like Cook County (IL), Detroit (MI), Washington D.C., and New Jersey. 

Catch income fraud without a subscription. Bank-verified income verification through Finicity by Mastercard is available on any plan as a $10 add-on, typically paid by the applicant. No subscription upgrade required. That's a meaningful difference from TurboTenant, which locks bank-verified income behind a $199/year plan.

Who it fits: Small landlords who want the broadest free plan available, with Zillow reach, compliance automation, and income fraud protection included from day one.

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TurboTenant

TurboTenant is one of most well-known free property management platforms for landlords. Its free tier covers listings, screening, rent collection, and maintenance requests, and it's often the first platform new landlords try. That brand recognition is undeniable, but the free plan has meaningful gaps that show up quickly.

What works on the free plan. TurboTenant lets you create rental listings and syndicate them to Realtor.com, Rent.com, and several other sites at no cost. Screening, rent collection, and maintenance tracking are all included. For a landlord who just needs to get a listing live and start collecting applications, the free plan covers those basics.

Key features sit behind paywalls. Lease agreements and e-signatures require the Essentials plan at $149/year. Bank-verified income verification, which confirms whether applicants can actually afford rent through a direct bank connection, requires the Pro plan at $199/year. If you need both within your first leasing cycle, the "free" starting point leads to a $199/year commitment relatively quickly.

Compliance and listing gaps. TurboTenant no longer syndicates to Zillow-family sites (Zillow, Trulia, HotPads), which limits your listing reach when a unit is vacant and every day costs money. Adverse action notices are a sample letter you manage yourself, not an automated workflow. And screening reports take one to three days, which can slow down your decision when you're reviewing multiple applicants after a weekend of showings.

Who it fits: Landlords who want a recognized platform with a free tier and are comfortable upgrading to Pro when they need income verification and accounting tools. 

Baselane

Baselane is a banking-first platform built specifically for landlords, and it's good at what it focuses on. The free Core plan gives you FDIC-insured bank accounts, automated rent collection, bookkeeping, late fee enforcement, and lease creation. That makes it a genuinely strong financial foundation at no cost.

What it does well. Baselane's strength is consolidating your rental finances into one purpose-built banking product. You can open dedicated accounts per property, separate security deposits from operating funds, earn a competitive APY on balances, and track income and expenses with automatic categorization. For landlords whose biggest headache is juggling spreadsheets, personal bank accounts, and Venmo payments, Baselane includes everything in one account. 

What it doesn't do. Baselane is not an all-in-one property management platform. It does not create or syndicate rental listings, which means you'll need a separate tool or manual posting to fill vacancies. It does not automate adverse action notices. If your workflow starts with finding tenants and ends with managing finances, Baselane covers the second half but leaves the first half to you.

Who it fits: Landlords who already have a reliable way to find tenants and want a strong free banking and bookkeeping tool. If listing syndication and compliance automation are part of your workflow, you'll need to pair Baselane with another platform.

Innago

Innago takes a different approach than the other platforms in this guide: there are no subscription tiers at all. Screening, leases, e-sign, rent collection, maintenance requests, listing syndication, expense tracking, and tenant communication are all included at no cost to the landlord.

What makes it stand out. The pricing model is the headline: everything is free for the landlord, with revenue coming from applicant-paid screening fees and tenant transaction fees. Innago pulls from both TransUnion and Experian, making it one of the few platforms that uses two credit bureaus. Reports are typically instant. Income verification offers three methods (bank account connection, payroll provider connection, and document upload with machine-learning validation) as a $10 applicant-paid add-on. The bank connection method is functionally bank-verified, which puts Innago ahead of platforms that rely solely on document uploads.

Where the gaps are. Innago does not syndicate to Zillow, which limits your listing reach to smaller networks like Doorsteps, Realtor.com, and Zumper. Adverse action notices are entirely the landlord's responsibility since there's no automated workflow and no template provided. And while Innago has strong user reviews, the platform's overall scale is smaller than the other options in this guide, with no publicly disclosed user count.

Who it fits: Landlords who want a free platform with comprehensive features and are comfortable managing compliance steps (like adverse action notices) on their own. For landlords who need Zillow listing reach or automated compliance protection, those features aren't available on Innago at any price.

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Other platforms worth knowing

A few other platforms may be worth evaluating depending on your situation.

Avail, owned by Realtor.com, offers a free plan covering listings, screening, leases, rent collection, and maintenance with no unit limits. It's a solid option for landlords managing their own rentals, though income verification is document-upload only and adverse action notices are not automated. 

Landlord Studio takes an accounting-first approach with a mobile-friendly interface. The free tier covers up to 3 units, and PRO starts at $12/month. A good fit if financial tracking and tax reporting are your primary needs rather than the full rental workflow.

Apartments.com offers free listings, screening, a lease builder, and rent collection, with listings syndicated across CoStar-owned sites. Income verification is document-upload only, adverse action is a template, and listing distribution is limited to CoStar's own network rather than Zillow or other major sites.

Frequently asked questions

RentSpree offers the strongest free plan in this category: listing syndication to Zillow and 12+ other sites, tenant screening, rent collection, basic bookkeeping, and automated adverse action notices are all included at no cost. Bank-verified income verification is available as a $10 applicant-paid add-on on any plan, no subscription required.

Yes. Innago charges no monthly fees or subscription tiers. Every feature (screening, leases, rent collection, maintenance, and listings) is available at no cost to the landlord. The tradeoffs are no Zillow syndication and no automated adverse action notices. RentSpree’s free plan includes both.

Baselane is good for landlords whose primary need is banking and bookkeeping. The free Core plan includes FDIC-insured accounts, rent collection, and expense tracking. It does not create or syndicate rental listings and does not automate adverse action notices, so landlords who need to find tenants or manage compliance will need a separate tool. RentSpree covers both and pairs well with Baselane's financial features.

TurboTenant's free plan covers listings, screening, rent collection, and maintenance requests. However, lease agreements require the Essentials plan at $149/year, and bank-verified income verification requires the Pro plan at $199/year. RentSpree's free plan includes automated compliance notices and offers bank-verified income as a $10 add-on on any plan.

Yes. RentSpree's free plan lets you manage your rentals in one place. You can reach tenants on Zillow and 12+ top listing sites from a single post, screen applicants with automated federal compliance notices built in, collect rent online, and track your income and expenses.

Even with one unit, you're managing listings, screening applicants, collecting rent, and tracking expenses. Rental management software centralizes all of that so nothing slips through the cracks. It also handles steps you might not think about on your own, like federal compliance notices when you deny an applicant based on a screening report. Most platforms in this guide offer a free plan, so there's little reason not to try one.

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