Renters’ Rights Bill
The Renters’ Rights Bill is moving through Parliament and should become law in late 2025 or early 2026. It’s a big change for the private rental market, focusing on stronger tenant rights, better housing standards, and clearer rules.
Key Changes
- End of ‘No-Fault’ Evictions: Landlords can’t evict tenants without a valid legal reason.
- Periodic Tenancies: All rental contracts will be rolling (no fixed terms). Tenants can leave with 2 months’ notice. Landlords need a legal reason to end it.
- Rent Increases: Allowed once a year, must match market rates. Tenants can challenge unfair rises.
- No Rent Bidding: Rent must be advertised at a fixed price no bidding wars.
- Advance Rent & Deposits: Max 1 month’s rent in advance. Deposit rules stay the same.
- Pets: Tenants can ask to keep pets. Landlords must give good reasons to refuse. Pet insurance may be required.
- Decent Homes Standard: All rentals must meet basic safety and quality standards (e.g., no mould, safe structure).
- No Discrimination: Illegal to reject tenants just for being on benefits or having children.
- Landlord Register & Ombudsman: All landlords must register. A new Ombudsman will handle complaints.
What It Means for Landlords
- Evictions will take longer and need proof.
- Tenants can leave more easily, possibly leading to higher turnover.
- Rent rises are limited and challengeable.
- Higher standards expected for property condition and safety.
- Advertising and tenant selection must be fair.
- Greater oversight and penalties for breaking rules.
- Good records and proactive property management will matter more.
How Landlords Can Prepare
- Update tenancy agreements for rolling contracts.
- Fix issues like damp or hazards to meet Decent Homes rules.
- Use fair evidence when raising rent, and keep records.
- Plan fair policies for pet requests.
- Keep track of government updates.
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