You’ve probably heard vendors promise “instant background checks.” Maybe you’ve even wondered why your own screening process takes longer than advertised.
Truly instant background checks don’t exist in regulated enterprise hiring. Not because of technology limitations, but because of how courts and public records actually work.
Let’s talk about why.
The Database Shortcut (and Why It’s Usually Not Enough)
Some providers lean heavily on database searches because they’re fast. You query a pre-aggregated system, you get results in seconds. On paper, it looks instant.
Database results come with gaps, though. Records can be incomplete. Dates get outdated. Dispositions go missing entirely. Coverage varies wildly depending on where someone has lived or worked.
Enterprise employers operating under FCRA regulations need verified, court-sourced records. Getting those takes time because the verification step can’t be skipped.
Most Criminal Searches Still Require a Human
Here’s what many people outside the screening industry don’t realize: a large portion of U.S. counties still require clerk-assisted criminal searches.
Someone physically has to request records from the courthouse during business hours. Requests get processed when court staff are available. Turnaround depends on local workflows, which vary widely from county to county. Records might be indexed differently depending on the jurisdiction. A human has to review and verify what’s returned.
The infrastructure for automation just isn’t there yet in most places.
Why Speed Without Accuracy Costs You More Time
When background checks are rushed without proper verification, you end up with mismatched records that require follow-up. Candidate disputes over inaccurate information. Delayed decisions while your team investigates. Extra compliance review to confirm what should have been confirmed upfront.
Cutting corners to save a day or two can add a week to the backend.
What “Fast” Should Actually Mean
Regulated employers need reliable results delivered as efficiently as possible given real-world constraints. That’s it.
A good provider knows which jurisdictions have limitations and tells you upfront instead of letting you find out when a search is delayed. They run verified searches, not just database queries. They keep you informed when something takes longer than expected. They give you results you can actually use to make hiring decisions.
Enterprise teams tend to stick with vendors who prioritize consistency and transparency over speed claims.
What to Ask Your Background Screening Provider
When you’re evaluating providers, skip the marketing claims about speed. Ask these questions:
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What percentage of searches are clerk-assisted vs. automated in the regions you hire from?
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How do they handle jurisdictions with slower turnaround times?
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What’s their process for verifying records before reporting them?
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How do they support you when a result needs additional review?
The answers will tell you whether a provider understands the work or just knows how to sell it.
Background screening is complex because hiring is complex. People move across jurisdictions, courts operate on different systems, and compliance requirements vary by industry and location. Understanding these realities helps you choose a provider who can deliver what you actually need.
Want to talk through what realistic turnaround times look like for your hiring volume and locations? Reach out to UBS to learn how we approach background screening for enterprise teams.
