2 months ago | 4 comments
The government has confirmed what information must be included in new tenancy agreements for the Renters’ Rights Act.
Landlords will need to give this information when creating a new tenancy on or after 1 May 2026.
It’s important for landlords to know that you will not need to provide this information to an existing tenant if the tenancy was signed before 1 May 2026.
Instead, landlords will need to give tenants a copy of the Renters’ Rights Act information sheet, or they could face a £7,000 fine.
If landlords are using a new tenancy agreement after 1 May 2026, they must include certain information such as:
The government explain that landlords do not have to provide an email address or phone number, but they can choose to do so if they would like the tenant to be able to contact them.
The government say this could be helpful if you would like tenants to report repairs by phone or email.
Landlords can also choose to include the contact details of a property manager or letting agent, if they have one, but they are not required to do so.
However, the government point out that landlords must ensure they have permission from the letting agent to include their contact details.
Other information that must be included in tenancy agreements include:
If the rent amount includes bills, then landlords must explain which bills are covered.
The government explains landlords do not need to say how much of the rent covers the cost of bills, but landlords can choose to include this if they wish.
Landlords may decide to ask tenants to make separate payments to them or someone else connected to them for the purpose of paying bills. If they do this, landlords must explain:
Landlords only need to give tenants this information for certain bills. These are:
Landlords only need to give this information for bills that are covered by the rent or which tenants must pay to them separately. Landlords do not need to explain which bills the tenant is responsible for arranging or paying directly to the supplier.
Landlords must include the amount of the tenancy deposit, if they have taken one or plan to take one from their tenant.
The government explain: “Rules on tenancy deposits mean landlords must give specific information to tenants within 30 days of receiving the money. For example, this includes which government-approved scheme the deposit is or will be protected in.
“This information does not have to be provided at the same time as the other tenancy information listed, but it can be if landlords wish to do so.”
Landlords must also include the minimum amount of notice a tenant must give when serving notice to end the tenancy, as well as information about landlords ending a tenancy, such as through an order for possession.
However, the government have clarified an important exception: “The only circumstance where a landlord would not need to obtain an order for possession is where the Secretary of State has given written notice that the occupier is disqualified from occupying premises under a residential tenancy agreement because of their immigration status.
“In this circumstance, the landlord should instead serve the occupier with a notice to end the tenancy under the relevant immigration legislation.”
Under the Renters’ Rights Act, tenants will be able to request a pet, which landlords cannot unreasonably refuse. The government say a statement confirming this must be included in new tenancy agreements.
Other required information includes a statement that the landlord must ensure the property is fit for human habitation and details of the landlord’s obligations under Section 11 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985
The government also says that if there is only a verbal tenancy agreement (even if it began before 1 May 2026), landlords will still need to provide this information.
A full list of everything that needs to be included can be viewed by clicking here.
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Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2190 - Articles: 2
10:28 AM, 23rd March 2026, About 3 weeks ago
A few things have been added, but the vast majority of the information demanded by the new legislation was already included within existing AST’s. The major difference is that a minor omission will now result in a major fine.
Member Since January 2016 - Comments: 472
6:44 PM, 23rd March 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Does this additional information on Tenancy Agreement or the RRA information sheet replace the ‘How to Rent’ Document?
As of this evening, it’s still the Oct 2023 version on the government website and contradicts the new rules
Member Since July 2016 - Comments: 7
7:42 AM, 28th March 2026, About 2 weeks ago
Where’s the ‘model’ tenancy agreement that includes all this stuff? They used to publish one. Not got round to it??