2 weeks ago | 1 comments
Never in the history of rental property has so much damage been done by so few to so many.
It is now evident it’s not just bad landlords that are being impacted, but all landlords and all tenants, literally millions of people. By treating landlords as serious criminals for not sending a four-page letter to their tenants (which can easily be found on the internet)
Then, imposing a fine of £7000 for each failure, the government is categorising a section of the population with unprecedented punitive threats. It’s quite remarkable but incredibly damaging to the whole rental industry.
The failure to send the letter immediately puts you, one of the good landlords who has got on just fine with your tenants for years, in the category 5 criminal bracket. You may then be treated akin to a criminal who does the following:
Firearms & Prohibited Weapons: A criminal who manufactures, sells, or imports realistic imitation firearms can attract maximum Level 5 summary penalties.
Wildlife & Animal Offences: The maximum summary conviction fine for a criminal who commits severe wildlife crimes, such as the illegal trade of endangered species, starts at Level 5.
Corporate Health & Safety: Under Sentencing Council guidelines, micro-businesses or small companies that commit Category 4 health and safety breaches with low culpability frequently receive starting-point fines in the region of £7,000.
Selling unlawful knives to persons under 18 can incur Level 5.
Environmental & Waste Crimes: Certain commercial waste disposal or landfill breaches (such as accepting prohibited waste) can result in standard fixed penalties or court-mandated fines starting in the thousands.
Having thrown the board over in this vitriolic attack, what accountability and success criteria are there for ministers to show how they have improved the rental market? After all, ministers are obliged to act in a fit and proper way and thus should be measured.
It seems reasonable to ask how the success of this clandestine policy will be evaluated and how accountability will be targeted to those responsible for the impending chaos.
There are some bad landlords and some bad tenants, but the Renters’ Rights Act appears wholly unsuitable as an effective solution.
What does the Property118 community think?
Thanks,
Paul
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Property managers set for Renters' Rights Act boost
2 weeks ago | 1 comments
4 weeks ago | 7 comments
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Member Since October 2025 - Comments: 12
10:21 AM, 26th May 2026, About 3 hours ago
Well, Reform has pledged to abolish the RRA, so I know where my vote is going in the next General Election.
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 322
10:30 AM, 26th May 2026, About 3 hours ago
When the PRS database gets rolled out later this year I’m sure Labour will use it as a tool to name and shame LLs with any fines small or large.
Terrible environment for LLs. I have property inspection from the council next week as part of so called ‘Selective’ licensing. I am dreading it from some over zealous/ LL hating inspector itching to dish out income generating fines that I am sure I will get for very minor stuff and I’m not even in the rogue category but will get treated like one for sure.
Member Since May 2017 - Comments: 790
11:05 AM, 26th May 2026, About 2 hours ago
Lets start with 2 metrics to measure the success of this Act
1. Cost of monthly Rent
2. Number of properties available to rent
Member Since February 2016 - Comments: 980 - Articles: 1
12:05 PM, 26th May 2026, About 56 minutes ago
Reply to the comment left by Roger Radford at 26/05/2026 – 10:21
The thing is – can you believe them,
I do not.
Member Since January 2020 - Comments: 1105 - Articles: 1
12:25 PM, 26th May 2026, About 37 minutes ago
Reply to the comment left by Roger Radford at 26/05/2026 – 10:21
It won’t be a quick fix, the RRA will be so embedded by the time of the next election that it will take much political will, time and effort to replace it with something more acceptable to landlords, even if that is the intention. Many Reform voters are likely to be renters and a new government will be as conscious as its predecessors of the need to retain their support. The best we could probably hope for in the short term is the removal of the draconian penalties that have been introduced by the RRA. Reintroduction of something similar to S21 would be particularly problematic and unlikely to be retrospective – old protected tenancies were never converted to ASTs.
Simplistic promises are rarely kept in the way you expect.
Member Since February 2024 - Comments: 76
12:36 PM, 26th May 2026, About 25 minutes ago
Well dear UK, between not having any faith in ‘Rachel from accounts’, as a landlord and economist; fed up with the dual standards of MPs which many might call corrupt, and being made to feel like a criminal when I personally have done NOTHING WRONG. BUT WICKED AND NASTY TENANTS HAVE BEEN ALLOWED TO TREAT ME LIKE s**t … And on top of the 200+ pages the government expects us to read and cope with from the RRA and for heavens sake – what do I know about making tax digital and IT !!!??? My solution is simple…. I’m leaving, and taking my money with me . Bye bye…