Employer Background Checks and Your Rights

Are you applying for a job or a promotion? Employers might run a background check on you. Federal law and some state laws give you rights if they do. Employers must get your written permission before running a background check from a background reporting company. You have the right to say no, but if you do, you may not get the job.

What Employers Can Ask About Your Background

When employers ask you about your background, they must treat you the same as other applicants — regardless of your race, national origin, color, sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, and transgender status), religion, disability, genetic information (including family medical history), or age (if you’re 40 or older).

Employers aren’t allowed to ask for extra background information because you are, say, of a certain race.

There are also rules about the types of questions employers can ask you:

Employers cannot ask you about or check your background for your

Employers might ask you about or check your background for your

Background Reporting Companies

When employers hire a background reporting company in the business of compiling information on people's background and history, certain rules apply:

If You’re Turned Down for a Job or Promotion

There are times it’s legal for an employer to deny you a job or a promotion based on information in your background report. Other times, the employer’s decision to deny you a job or a promotion might be based on discrimination. If you don’t get a job or a promotion because of information in your background report, the employer must tell you the following verbally, in writing, or electronically:

When you get your background report, review it carefully. If you think there are mistakes, contact the background reporting company to explain the mistakes and ask that they fix them. Include any supporting documentation you have with your request. If the background reporting company informs you that it has revised your report, review the report to make sure the mistakes are gone. Ask the background reporting company to send a copy of the corrected report to the employer and tell the employer about the mistake.

Denial Due to Discrimination

Sometimes, an employer’s use of an individual’s background report information can lead to illegal discrimination. For example, employers shouldn’t use a background report policy or practice that

This means an employer cannot have a policy or practice that has a disparate impact on a particular group, unless there’s a job-related reason and it’s consistent with business necessity.

If you think an employer discriminated against you during the background check process, you may contact the EEOC by

The EEOC enforces federal laws that make it illegal to discriminate against a job applicant or an employee because of the person’s race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, and transgender status), national origin, age (if you’re 40 or older), disability, or genetic information, or in retaliation for a person’s involvement in prior activities protected by federal employment discrimination laws. The EEOC investigates, conciliates, and mediates charges of employment discrimination and, in some instances, files lawsuits in the public interest.

What To Do Before You Apply

Protect Your Privacy

Report to the FTC

If an employer got your background report without your permission, or rejected you without sending you the required notices, report it to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Also tell the FTC if you think a background check company included errors in your background check.

Keep in mind that the information in this article is not legal advice. For that, you’ll need to consult an attorney. For the most up to date EEO-related developments, visit eeoc.gov.