Government insists courts can cope with Renters’ Rights Act

Government insists courts can cope with Renters’ Rights Act

Renters’ Rights Act possession claims entering the court system as landlords rely on Section 8 notices
8:00 AM, 1st July 2026, 3 hours ago 2

The government claims the courts have “sufficient capacity to manage the impact of the Renters’ Rights Act”.

The act came into force on 1 May this year and, with the abolition of Section 21, landlords must now rely on Section 8 notices and specific grounds to regain possession.

As previously reported by Property118, industry experts have warned that the act could overwhelm the court system.

Increased sitting days to deal with demand

In a written Parliamentary question, Labour MP Bambos Charalambous asked: “What assessment has the government made of the potential merits of additional County Court sitting hours to deal with Section 8 possession claims following the commencement of the Renters’ Rights Act?”

Justice Minister Sarah Sackman said the government had increased the number of sitting days to deal with demand.

She said: “The Ministry of Justice (including its executive agency, His Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service) has worked closely with the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government to ensure that the courts have sufficient capacity to manage the impact of the Renters’ Rights Act, including the increase in Section 8 claims following its commencement.

“This year, over 80,000 sitting days were committed to the civil jurisdiction. This is a significant increase and recognises the importance of the civil jurisdiction.”

Landlords having to wait weeks to regain possession

However, as previously reported by Property118, the court backlog shows no sign of slowing down.

The National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) pointed out that landlords are having to wait weeks for court hearings to regain possession of their properties.

According to government statistics, it now takes an average of over 34 weeks between a landlord making a claim to the courts to possess a property under the grounds-based Section 8 process and a property being repossessed, the highest level in four years.


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Comments

  • Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 176

    10:15 AM, 1st July 2026, About 36 minutes ago

    There is no Civil Justice For Landlords.

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 156

    10:50 AM, 1st July 2026, About 1 minute ago

    Sackham also said in the last week..`The backlog of criminal court cases could take “nearly 300 years” to bring back to levels seen before the COVID pandemic without reforms to cut jury trials, a justice minister has said.`
    EPC infringements, RRA disputes, LA pursuit of L/L`s, etc..non will be heard in a just & timely way. The courts have been underfunded for 25 years. Early release of offenders is after 30% of time served, suspended sentences take more administration than jail but cheaper..etc.
    We really don`t a properly functioning court justice system at all.

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