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The FCRA Checklist Every Hiring Manager Should Print and Tape to Their Desk
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
Key takeaways
- Use a standalone disclosure and separate written/electronic authorization for all employment consumer reports.
- Follow pre-adverse and adverse action steps precisely — provide the report and Summary of Rights before final decisions.
- Document and retain disclosures, reports, notices, certifications, and audit trails to reduce litigation risk.
- Apply state/local rules and individualized assessments where required; use consistent, job-related criteria.
Table of contents
- The FCRA checklist — step-by-step
- The printable “tape-to-the-desk” checklist (compact)
- Common mistakes and simple fixes
- Operationalizing the checklist
- Practical takeaways for employers
- Why following this FCRA checklist reduces hiring risk
- Conclusion: keep the FCRA checklist within reach
- FAQ
The FCRA checklist — step-by-step
Confirm permissible purpose before ordering a report
Verify the screening is for an employment purpose. The FCRA only allows consumer reports for certain permissible purposes (employment is one of them). Document the job title and business reason for the check.Use a standalone, clear disclosure and get written authorization
Provide a clear, standalone disclosure that a consumer report may be obtained for employment purposes. It cannot be buried in an application or mixed with other consent language.
Obtain the candidate’s written authorization (electronic consent is acceptable if it’s separate, conspicuous, and recorded).Verify identity and minimize scope
Confirm the candidate’s identity before ordering. Limit the scope of the report to what’s job-related and proportionate (e.g., criminal history for safety-sensitive positions).Certify permissible purpose to your consumer reporting agency (CRA)
When you submit an order, you or your vendor must certify to the CRA that you have a permissible purpose and that you provided the required disclosure and authorization.Provide pre-adverse action notice when the report could lead to a negative decision
If you’re considering rescinding an offer or taking other adverse action because of the report, give the candidate:- A copy of the consumer report used; and
- A copy of the “A Summary of Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.”
Allow a reasonable time for the candidate to review and respond. The FCRA does not prescribe a fixed waiting period, but document the time allowed and any follow-up.
Follow with a complete adverse action notice if you proceed
If you make an adverse employment decision, send an adverse action letter that includes:- Notice that adverse action was taken;
- The name, address, and phone of the CRA that supplied the report;
- A statement that the CRA did not make the adverse decision and cannot provide reasons;
- Notice of the candidate’s right to obtain a free copy of the report and dispute its accuracy with the CRA within 60 days.
Keep a copy of the adverse action letter and how it was delivered.
Apply state and local restrictions consistently
Check for “ban the box,” limitations on using arrest or conviction records, and other local rules that may restrict when and how you consider criminal history. Apply those rules uniformly and document job-related justifications when needed.Perform individualized assessments when required
For certain decisions, particularly those that implicate criminal history, consider an individualized assessment: evaluate the nature of the offense, time elapsed, and relevance to the job. Document the rationale for your decision.Keep records and audit trails
Retain disclosure/authorization forms, copies of consumer reports provided to candidates, pre-adverse and adverse notices, and certifications to CRAs. Maintain an audit trail of who ordered the report, when, and the hiring decision.Train hiring teams and maintain written procedures
Ensure hiring managers and recruiters understand the FCRA steps and state/local rules. Maintain a simple SOP for ordering reports, handling pre-adverse/adverse actions, and documenting steps.Manage vendor relationships and verify compliance
If you use an outside screening provider, require FCRA compliance certifications and written policies. Confirm they supply the Summary of Rights, support dispute handling, and can provide copies of reports for pre-adverse notices.Review and update regularly
Laws and state requirements change. Review your screening process annually (or sooner for jurisdictions where rules change) and update templates, training, and vendor contracts.
The printable “tape-to-the-desk” checklist (compact)
- Confirm permissible purpose (employment)
- Provide standalone disclosure + written/electronic authorization
- Verify candidate identity; limit scope to job-related checks
- Certify permissible purpose to the CRA/vendor
- If report may cause adverse action:
- Send candidate a copy of the report and the FCRA Summary of Rights
- Allow reasonable time for response (document it)
- If you proceed:
- Send adverse action notice with required CRA info and statement
- Apply state/local restrictions and perform individualized assessments
- Retain records and audit trail
- Train staff and maintain SOPs
- Require vendor compliance certification
- Re-review process annually
Common mistakes and simple fixes
Mistake: Disclosure buried in an application or combined with other releases.
Fix: Use a standalone, clearly labeled disclosure and a separate signature or checked box for authorization.Mistake: Skipping pre-adverse action and sending only an adverse notice.
Fix: Provide the report and Summary of Rights before finalizing the decision; document timing and candidate responses.Mistake: Applying inconsistent policies across candidates or locations.
Fix: Centralize screening decisions or use written job-related criteria to avoid discrimination exposure.Mistake: Assuming federal rules are the only rules.
Fix: Maintain a state and local law matrix and apply the most restrictive rule.
Operationalizing the checklist
Turning legal steps into a smooth hiring workflow avoids delays and compliance gaps.
- Integrate into your ATS/HRIS: Automate triggers for disclosures, vendor orders, and pre-adverse/adverse workflows so nothing is missed.
- Standardize templates: Use approved disclosure, pre-adverse, and adverse action templates that include required language and vendor details.
- Assign clear ownership: Define who orders reports, who reviews them, who approves adverse actions, and where documentation is stored.
- Conduct quarterly audits: Spot-check records to verify disclosures, authorizations, and notices were handled correctly.
- Train for nuance: Teach recruiters how to interpret reports at a high level and when to escalate for an individualized assessment or legal review.
Practical takeaways for employers
- Never bury the disclosure: Standalone and conspicuous disclosures plus separate consent save the most complaints.
- Document everything: Dates, copies of reports, candidate responses, and why a decision was made are your best defense.
- Be consistent and job-related: Use the same criteria for similar roles and keep a written job-relatedness rationale for checks that could exclude candidates.
- Don’t assume one-size-fits-all: State and local rules may be more protective than the FCRA — follow the stricter rule.
- Partner smartly: A compliant screening vendor strengthens your process, but the employer remains responsible for following FCRA steps.
“Clear, documented processes speed hiring by reducing rework and candidate disputes.”
Why following this FCRA checklist reduces hiring risk
Complying with FCRA requirements isn’t just about avoiding fines — it reduces litigation risk, protects candidate privacy, and improves the candidate experience. Clear, documented processes speed hiring by reducing rework and candidate disputes. When hiring teams know the steps, decisions are more defensible and better aligned with business needs.
Conclusion: keep the FCRA checklist within reach
The FCRA checklist every hiring manager should print and tape to their desk is a practical control: it helps you order background checks responsibly, communicate clearly with candidates, and document decisions that withstand scrutiny. Keep a printed copy at your workstation, integrate the steps into your ATS, and review the checklist before every adverse action.
If you’d like a ready-to-print one-page checklist or help implementing consistent screening workflows across your hiring teams, Rapid Hire Solutions can help you map processes, review templates, and verify vendor compliance.
FAQ
What must I provide before ordering a consumer report for employment?
Answer: Provide a clear, standalone disclosure that a consumer report may be obtained for employment purposes and obtain the candidate’s written authorization (electronic consent is acceptable if separate and conspicuous). Also confirm you have a permissible employment purpose and document the job/business reason.
When do I need to send a pre-adverse action notice?
Answer: If the consumer report could lead you to rescind an offer or take another adverse employment action, you must provide the candidate a copy of the report and the FCRA Summary of Rights, and allow a reasonable time to respond before finalizing the decision. Document the timing and any responses.
What must an adverse action notice include?
Answer: The adverse action letter should state that adverse action was taken, list the CRA’s name/address/phone, state that the CRA did not make the decision and cannot provide reasons, and notify the candidate of their right to obtain a free copy of the report and dispute inaccuracies with the CRA within 60 days.
How do state and local rules affect my screening process?
Answer: Many jurisdictions impose stricter rules (e.g., ban-the-box, limits on arrest/conviction use). Maintain a state/local law matrix and apply the most restrictive rule. When required, conduct individualized assessments and document job-related justifications.
Answer: Retain disclosure/authorization forms, copies of consumer reports provided to candidates, pre-adverse and adverse notices, certifications to CRAs, and an audit trail showing who ordered the report, when, and the hiring decision. Regular audits help ensure compliance.