A tenant qualification questionnaire is a structured set of questions that determines whether a prospect matches your agency's criteria before any agent time is invested. Building an effective one requires selecting the right questions, ordering them strategically, assigning scores to each answer, and configuring escalation rules for borderline cases. Done correctly, it filters unqualified leads automatically and surfaces high-intent prospects instantly.
This guide walks through the complete process of designing, scoring, and deploying a qualification questionnaire—whether you're building it into an AI chatbot, a web form, or a WhatsApp flow.
Step 1: Define Your Qualification Criteria
Before writing a single question, define what a "qualified lead" looks like for your agency. This means specifying the minimum budget, acceptable move-in timelines, property types you offer, household size limits, and any other criteria that determine whether you can realistically serve a prospect.
Qualification criteria worksheet:
| Criterion | Minimum | Ideal | Disqualifying |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly budget | SGD 2,500 | SGD 4,000+ | Under SGD 2,000 |
| Move-in timeline | Within 90 days | Within 30 days | More than 6 months out |
| Lease duration | 12 months minimum | 24 months | Less than 6 months |
| Household size | Up to 4 occupants | 1–2 | 5+ (if building rules restrict) |
| Employment status | Employed/EP/PR | EP holder + salary > 5K | Unemployed, no visa |
| Pet | Depends on unit | No pets | Pets in no-pet building |
Fill this out for your agency before designing any questions. Every question should map directly to one of these criteria.
Step 2: Prioritize Your Questions
Order questions from most to least important—with the biggest disqualifiers first. Asking budget as the first substantive question saves time for everyone: if the budget doesn't match, there is no point asking about preferences.
Recommended question order:
- Budget (first—most important disqualifier)
- Move-in date (second—urgency determines priority)
- Property type (bedrooms, furnished/unfurnished)
- Location preference (match to your portfolio)
- Number of occupants (building rules compliance)
- Lease duration (minimum term alignment)
- Employment/visa status (eligibility)
- Special requirements (pets, parking, accessibility)
The first three questions should take no more than 2–3 minutes to answer. If the first three answers pass your criteria, continue. If budget disqualifies immediately, close the qualification loop gracefully.
Key insight: Never ask for name and contact details at the beginning of a qualification flow. Prospects who are asked to identify themselves before understanding what value they'll receive have a 40% higher abandonment rate. Collect identification after budget and timeline are confirmed.
Step 3: Write the Questions in Conversational Format
For WhatsApp and chatbot delivery, questions must feel like a natural conversation, not a form. Use friendly, direct phrasing and offer structured response options (buttons or ranges) to make answering easy.
Question writing guidelines:
- Use first-person address ("your" not "the applicant's")
- Keep each question to 1–2 sentences
- Offer response options where possible to reduce friction
- Avoid jargon (say "monthly rent" not "rental consideration")
- Use informal language appropriate to the channel (casual on WhatsApp, slightly more formal on email)
Conversation example vs. form example:
Form (bad): "State your intended monthly rental budget range (SGD):"
Chatbot (good): "What's your monthly budget for rent? → Under SGD 3,000 → SGD 3,000 – 4,500 → SGD 4,500 – 7,000 → Above SGD 7,000"
Step 4: Assign Scores to Each Answer
Create a scoring matrix that assigns positive points for answers matching your ideal tenant profile, lower points for acceptable but not ideal answers, and negative points for answers that represent challenges or disqualifying factors.
Sample scoring matrix:
Budget question:
- SGD 5,000+: +30 points
- SGD 3,500–5,000: +25 points
- SGD 2,500–3,500: +15 points
- SGD 2,000–2,500: +5 points
- Under SGD 2,000: −30 points (hard disqualify)
Move-in date:
- Within 14 days: +25 points
- Within 30 days: +20 points
- 30–60 days: +15 points
- 60–90 days: +8 points
- More than 90 days: +3 points (enter nurture sequence)
Employment status:
- EP holder / confirmed employment: +20 points
- PR or citizen with employment: +15 points
- Student pass with guarantor: +10 points
- Self-employed with documents: +10 points
- No confirmed employment: −20 points
Build your scoring matrix in a spreadsheet before configuring it in your platform—it's easier to review and adjust offline.
Step 5: Define Routing Based on Score Thresholds
Set score thresholds that determine what happens to each lead after qualification. A three-tier system (hot/warm/cold) works for most agencies; add a "disqualified" tier for hard fails.
Routing thresholds:
| Score Range | Tier | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 80–100 | Hot | Immediate agent notification + instant viewing offer |
| 50–79 | Warm | Automated viewing invitation + agent queue (respond within 2 hours) |
| 20–49 | Cold | Automated nurture sequence; agent review optional |
| Below 20 | Disqualified | Polite "not a match" message + optional referral to another resource |
Hard disqualify rules (override score):
- Budget below your minimum threshold → Disqualified regardless of other scores
- Active disputes with previous landlord declared → Manual review required
- Lead explicitly states they won't provide documentation → Flag for agent
Step 6: Handle Edge Cases
Design responses for the most common edge cases: tenants who refuse to answer a question, who give ambiguous answers, who ask about exceptions, or who are borderline on a criterion.
Common edge cases:
- "Budget is flexible": Offer ranges. If still vague after 2 attempts, assign median range score and flag for agent review
- "Moving in next week": This is both a high-urgency signal (+25 points) and a risk (may be in a desperate situation); flag for agent
- "I'm between jobs but expect to start soon": Do not score as employed; flag for manual review
- Two conflicting answers in the same session: Flag the conversation for agent review before proceeding to viewing offer
Configure the platform to add a "requires review" flag to any conversation that hits an edge case, so agents can verify before a viewing is confirmed.
Step 7: Translate for Multilingual Markets
If your agency serves tenants in multiple languages, translate the qualification questions and response options into each primary language. Use native speakers or professional translators to review—machine translation of nuanced conversational questions often produces awkward phrasing.
Translation requirements:
- All qualification questions and response option labels
- Scoring logic stays the same (language doesn't change criteria)
- Disqualification and escalation messages
- Confirmation and follow-up messages
For Singapore agencies, provide at least English and Mandarin versions. For Malaysia, add Bahasa Malaysia. For Hong Kong, add Traditional Chinese.
Conclusion
A well-designed tenant qualification questionnaire is the most impactful single investment a rental agency can make in its lead management process. It standardizes quality across every inquiry, eliminates the inconsistency of manual screening, and creates the foundation for AI-powered automation that scales without limits.
Join the waitlist to deploy your custom qualification questionnaire with RentPilot—deployed across WhatsApp and LINE in your agency's language and tone.
