Government defends PRS Ombudsman scheme amid concerns over landlord exodus

Government defends PRS Ombudsman scheme amid concerns over landlord exodus

Landlord holding property keys overlooking rental homes with a protective shield symbolising the new Landlord Redress Scheme.
8:01 AM, 2nd July 2026, 5 days ago 28

The government has claimed that the new Landlord Redress Scheme will support both landlords and tenants, claiming “good landlords have nothing to fear”.

Under the Renters’ Rights Act, the private landlord ombudsman scheme will provide independent dispute resolution, which the government describes as “fair and impartial” and intended to give tenants access to redress outside the courts.

During a debate in the House of Lords, Baroness Taylor of Stevenage rejected claims of a landlord exodus, saying the Renters’ Rights Act would have “only a negligible impact on the availability of rental property.”

Redress scheme will help landlords

Speaking during the debate, Baroness Taylor of Stevenage said: “Most landlords are looking to provide a good service to their tenants.

“The new landlord redress scheme will support landlords to do just that, by providing guidance and tools to help them handle complaints locally and early in order to prevent escalation.

“This new service will close a key gap in housing redress, providing private rented sector tenants with enhanced consumer protection rights which tenants in the social rented sector already benefit from. It will help to raise standards in the sector by equipping landlords with tools and information on what best practice looks like.”

She added that, while the regulations do not immediately require landlords to join the Ombudsman scheme, they are expected to do so in the future.

She said: “Rather, they set out the statutory criteria that any future scheme must meet, including requirements relating to governance, complaint handling, types of redress and enforcement of decisions, information sharing, reporting and review.

“This framework is essential because a scheme cannot be approved or designated until these conditions are in force. It therefore enables the next stage of implementation: the establishment of the private rented sector landlord ombudsman scheme and, in due course, further regulations specifying which landlords will need to become members of a scheme and when such a requirement will come into effect.”

Drive landlords out of the market

However, Lord Jamieson, speaking for the Conservatives, warned that additional regulations could drive landlords out of the private rented sector.

During the debate, he said: “The government have described this scheme as a complementary measure, sitting alongside local authority enforcement powers, licensing regimes, the courts and the new landlord database, yet many landlords look at this growing list of registration requirements, fees, compliance obligations and potentially significant fines, not to mention court delays, and wonder whether it is worth the candle to carry on renting out a property.”

Lord Jamieson also questioned how the new scheme would avoid duplication where landlords already use managing agents, who are required to belong to an approved redress scheme.

He said: “Many landlords employ agents to manage their properties; those agents are already required to belong to a redress scheme. Under these regulations, landlords will also be required to join such a scheme, which we raised during the passage of the Bill.

“Can the Minister explain how the government intend to avoid duplication where a complaint relates to actions involving both a landlord and an agent? If a tenant complains about property management repairs, communication failures or other issues where responsibilities overlap, how will the scheme determine who is accountable?”

Hold landlords accountable

Responding, Baroness Taylor of Stevenage said the regulations are intended to hold landlords accountable for issues that are ultimately their responsibility.

She said: “These regulations are intended to close the gap that existed between the redress system for agents and making sure that there is some redress to landlords.

“These regulations specifically concern the landlord redress issues and schemes for people in the private rented sector. They do not alter the existing legal requirements that apply to letting agents, including the requirement to be a member of one of the approved agent redress schemes.

“It is intended that this new framework will fill the gap faced by private renters, specifically where the responsibility for an issue lies with the landlord rather than the agent. It is not right for a landlord to be able to get away from their responsibility because it is the agent that is part of a redress scheme.

“We expect co-operation between the new service and the existing agent redress scheme where appropriate.”

No landlord exodus

Baroness Taylor also denied the Renters’ Rights Act will cause a landlord exodus.

She said: “I know that some organisations are putting forward alarming figures, but the work we have done shows that there would be only a negligible impact on the availability of rental property. We will see how that works out over time.”

However, research by property consultancy firm Allsop found that 41% of landlords said they were unlikely or very unlikely to continue letting property following the abolition of Section 21, rising to 51% among single-property landlords.

As previously reported by Property118, ministers have also suggested the possibility of combining the PRS database registration process with Ombudsman registration. However, they have not confirmed whether landlords will be required to pay separate fees for each scheme.


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Comments

  • Member Since April 2022 - Comments: 136

    4:36 PM, 2nd July 2026, About 4 days ago

    Of course there is a landlord exodus. It wouldn’t make financial sense for there not to be (writing as a London and South East landlord). The problem is that exiting the market takes time and as a “good landlord”, I don’t really want to evict people just so that I can sell. I have /did have good relationships with all my tenants. Now, any time one of my houses becomes available it will be sold and not re-let. I have already sold a few like that and I don’t miss a single one. Give me a fine for something stupid or make my life any harder and the whole lot will go immediately.

  • Member Since August 2024 - Comments: 17

    6:24 PM, 2nd July 2026, About 4 days ago

    Pull other one its all for tenants

  • Member Since August 2024 - Comments: 17

    6:24 PM, 2nd July 2026, About 4 days ago

    Pull other one its all for tenants nothing for landlords init

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2250 - Articles: 2

    9:21 PM, 2nd July 2026, About 4 days ago

    How about an ombudsman scheme for tenants that all tenants have to join so that landlords can make a complaint about them?

  • Member Since December 2025 - Comments: 16

    10:01 PM, 2nd July 2026, About 4 days ago

    That last government took a wrecking ball to all PRS landlords and this government is taking great delight in swinging it vigorously with the intention of smashing all existing non corporate landlords out of business. Say no more.

  • Member Since October 2023 - Comments: 43

    5:07 PM, 3rd July 2026, About 3 days ago

    Maybe but I fear the tenants will make all the excuses they can to cause landlords problems. And that they don’t want to admit. It’s all about votes. No level playing field. They should have a bad tenant database so we can see who consistently plays foul. Or am I being too simple about this debacle. Referee. ⚽️

  • Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 79

    7:27 AM, 4th July 2026, About 3 days ago

    The Housing Minister keeps reiterating the mantra: “Good landlords don’t have to worry” and “There is no exodus of landlords from PRS”. Pennycook is wrong, and he knows it.

    There’s an old rule in finance: when capital stops earning, it starts walking.

    That’s exactly what’s happening with PRS money right now—not in a stampede, but in a steady, deliberate shift. The destination? Investments that offer three things the old ones don’t: higher yields, lower effort, and real safety.

    No more hands-on management. No more sleepless nights. Just better returns with less friction—and the money is following that path, step by step.

  • Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 178

    9:58 AM, 4th July 2026, About 2 days ago

    The Government keep repeating Good Landlords Have Nothing to Fear. Obviously unless your a Politician this is nonsense .
    They also Claim a £7000 to £30000. Fine is Fair and Reasonable. Without Going to Court.
    It`s also Fair and Reasonable for the Tenant to live Rent Free for Months why the possession claims go through
    the court Process .

    It is also Fair and Reasonable that Landlords will be increasing Rents, Not Housing any less than Perfect Tenant . Selling Up and investing Elsewhere .
    The Future for Landlords and Tenants is not Bright .

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1630

    11:08 AM, 4th July 2026, About 2 days ago

    I fear nothing from the redress scheme.

    My tenants will enjoy higher rents because I will have to pay to join the scam.

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 489

    11:15 AM, 4th July 2026, About 2 days ago

    Reply to the comment left by Northernpleb at 04/07/2026 – 09:58
    You are spot on and why i ask does mainstream media not say exactly that, in fact it’s only the many that comment online that think it’s unfair on landlords. 11% of Labour MPs are landlords but like previous ones that have been caught out they will be immune.
    I suppose you either have to grin and bear it or sell up and then who will the government blame for the homeless.Let’s see how many council houses good old Andy builds for them or will it be asylum seekers first.

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