5 months ago | 3 comments
Despite councils charging landlords hundreds of pounds for selective licensing schemes, the government claims councils should not profit from licensing.
In an investigative report by Property118, we contacted numerous councils and the government to ask why selective licensing schemes are so expensive compared to places like Jersey, where they cost £60 and are valid for two years.
We also investigated why the government is introducing a Private Rented Sector Database under the Renters’ Rights Act when selective licensing is already in place.
When contacted by Property118, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government told us it is up to councils to decide the fees.
A spokesperson said: “Licensing schemes are designed and determined locally, and local authorities have the discretion to charge fees which cover the cost of running these schemes. They are not expected to profit from licensing.
“The rate at which fees are set will be based on a number of factors such as the set-up costs of the scheme, the cost of assessing applications and issuing licences, and the cost of inspecting properties where necessary.
“We would expect local authorities to make details of these fees, along with the rationale behind their determination, transparent and readily accessible.”
Phil Turtle, licensing expert, at Landlord Licensing & Defence, says the selective licensing system is a mess and even points out that Chancellor Rachel Reeves broke the rules by renting out her family home without a selective licence.
He said: “There’s the rub, from the government, “We leave it to individual councils” that’s why there are hundreds of different licensing schemes, the thousands told council officers thinking up hundreds of different sets of rules that nobody understands (especially our glorious Chancellor it seems.”
One of the most expensive licensing schemes in the country includes Leicester, costing £1,290 per property.
As previously reported on Property118, Leicester council faced a legal challenge from leading letting agents Martin & Co Leicester and supported by JMP Solicitors.
The letting agents say the extortionate fee was causing “significant financial hardship for responsible landlords.
“In many cases, landlords simply cannot absorb these costs, meaning they are being forced to pass them onto tenants through higher rents.”
When contacted by Property118 about the selective licensing scheme, the council declined to comment.
Many councils across England charge hundreds of pounds for a licence, with hefty fines for those who fail to obtain one.
Lambeth Council, for example, has warned landlords that they must pay £923 for a selective licence or face a fine of up to £30,000 if they fail to licence their property.
According to Lambeth council, the licence fee of £923 will be used to cover the cost of administering the licence over a five-year period, and managing and enforcing the licensing regime.
However, in places like Jersey, licensing fees only cost £60 for two years and have seen positive results with the scheme’s first year, an impressive 18,044 properties, over 87%, were licensed, adding more than 18,000 homes to the system in record time.
Deputy Steve Luce, minister for the environment for Jersey’s state assembly, hailed the uptake as having “set a strong foundation for the future” and credited the scheme’s simplicity and affordability for its success.
Mr Turtle points to Jersey as proof that comprehensive regulation doesn’t require exorbitant fees or bureaucratic overload.
He explains: “If Jersey can license all rental properties for just £60 every two years and ensure they’re safe and compliant, why does England need a landlord database with its own fee, an ombudsman service with another fee and hundreds of council selective licensing schemes on top?”
Under the Renters’ Rights Act, all landlords will need to sign up for the database, which will include information about their properties that tenants can access
If a landlord lets or advertises a property without it first being registered on the database, they can be issued with a civil penalty of up to £7,000 or a £40,000 fine if they provide fraudulent information to the database.
However, this begs the question, why is the government introducing a private rented sector database when selective licensing is already in place?
The government told Property118, selective licensing and the Private Rented Sector Database have different purposes and the database is not designed to replace selective licensing.
The spokesperson said: “Unlike the Private Rented Sector Database, selective licensing schemes aim to target specific local issues by enabling more intensive proactive enforcement strategies.
“We will continue to review the use of selective licensing as we develop the Private Rented Sector Database, refining the way the two systems work together.”
Mr Turtle says the government response about the database and selective licensing schemes having a separate purpose only creates more confusion.
He said: “Jersey did one scheme and applied it to all with brilliant results.
“Instead of trying to defend the indefensible and leaving landlords at the mercy of the untrustworthy, incompetent revenue-grabbing councils, the government should just go ask Jersey for lessons in how to do it properly, then we would only need one combined database/licensing scheme and landlords wouldn’t need to pay for out-of-control councils and their nonsense.”
Selective licensing fees keep rising, yet local authorities face no commercial pressure to price fairly. Regulation has become a municipal revenue stream disguised as “cost recovery.” Professional landlords cannot rely on consistency or common sense from council bureaucracies. The only rational stance is to treat licensing as a compliance cost of doing business and plan accordingly.
Map exposure across your portfolio. List every property, council area, and renewal date. Anticipate upcoming licensing applications to avoid penalties and preserve cash flow.
Build compliance into your operating model. Standardise your documentation, fire safety checks and EPC records so that licence applications can be completed in hours, not weeks.
Factor licensing into yield analysis. A property that loses 0.5% of gross yield to fees may still perform if financing, tax and maintenance are optimised. Margin discipline matters more than local fairness.
Use corporate structure for efficiency. Group properties into SPVs or LLPs to ringfence liability, manage accounting transparency and simplify evidence for council audits.
Regulation will always lag behind professional landlords. Those who systemise their processes, document every decision and treat compliance as a cost-controlled routine gain an edge. Tenants trust them, lenders respect them, and councils prefer to work with them. That combination drives sustainable profit long after the latest licensing scheme fades.
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Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 15
10:12 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
SELECTIVE LICENCING – A Definition:
It is Legalised Theft to feed bankrupt councils – Packaged as a scheme when it’s really a Tax!
Member Since June 2023 - Comments: 14
10:13 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Also they are so far behind
I applied and received my HMO license approval after six months
Member Since September 2022 - Comments: 40
11:01 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Is it only certain areas in Leicester? I have properties there without licenses?
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2188 - Articles: 2
11:05 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Lawrie Madden at 12/11/2025 – 10:13
They are far behind, but you must be prompt. Fair and equable?
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2188 - Articles: 2
11:08 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Licencing fines apply to all except government ministers who say sorry. Why has Reeves not been fined, when all around her are penalised?
Member Since January 2024 - Comments: 341
11:11 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Unfortunately, as far as I am aware, there is no transparency on ‘cost recovery’.
Local Councils probably can, and do, dump all sorts of spurious costs into the pot and have all sorts of dubious forecasts about sign up rates, etc.
Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 15
11:49 AM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Reply to the comment left by John Bentley at 11:01
The Oadby & Wigston Council have just brought in SL, but it’s only in several Wigston areas and nothing in Oadby currently (I live in Oadby although my few remaining houses I haven’t sold yet are in Sutton in Ashfield (Notts).
Member Since October 2025 - Comments: 1
1:05 PM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Hilariously in Westminster every area now has to pay c. £1,000 per property except in 3 small wards. And where are those wards? Adjacent to the Houses of Parliament.
Totally unjustifiable.
And the idea that as Landlords we are responsible for how a tenant disposes of their rubbish? If we fail to tell them in writing when the collection days are – information anyone can find online – we can be fined. Because of course a tenant can’t be expected to find out for themselves. Like they can’t be expected to pay for damages their pet causes.
These licences are a field day for vexatious tenants, providing even more spurious ways to threaten landlords.
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2188 - Articles: 2
2:06 PM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Pippa Brill at 12/11/2025 – 13:05
When I moved to my current house, as an owner-occupier, I looked out of my window and observed when my neighbours put their rubbish out for collection. No computer or internet required, no letter from my lender, just a bit of intelligent observation.
Member Since October 2025 - Comments: 2
3:06 PM, 12th November 2025, About 5 months ago
Bristol city council licence £1,861
Absolutely outrageous. Their payment online system doesn’t work. I applied for a renewal in June and I’m still waiting by email and don’t get any response for weeks.
What is going on?