2 weeks ago | 17 comments
If you want to understand exactly how the Renters’ Rights Act is going to restrict private landlords of control over their own property, look no further than the story this week about a tenant named Ms A and her pet cat, Marshy.
Property118 reports that the tenant wanted a cat in her one-bedroom flat; the landlord initially said no; a charity stepped in, challenged the refusal and the landlord ultimately accepted the request.
For me, this case reveals a new reality for the private rented sector because what campaigners present as a straightforward victory also exposes the imbalance in the protections available to the two parties.
Property size remains relevant, but landlords can no longer rely on a blanket rule. They must relate the size and nature of the animal to the particular property.
The charity involved countered the ‘too small’ reason by stating that ‘sweeping generalisations’ regarding property size are legally non-compliant.
If a tenant requests a pet, you can no longer reply with casual, practical logic.
The moment you type only ‘the flat is too small’ or ‘I don’t think it is suitable’, without explaining why that particular animal is unsuitable for that particular property, you risk an immediate challenge.
A restriction in a superior lease or a documented allergy in a shared home may provide strong grounds, but the legislation does not give landlords a simple checklist of guaranteed exemptions.
The most worrying part of this story, however, is what happened when the landlord tried to negotiate.
Wanting to mitigate their risk, the landlord requested two reasonable conditions: that the tenant purchase pet damage insurance, and that they commit to a professional deep clean at the end of the tenancy.
The charity’s response was that both conditions would amount to prohibited requirements under the Tenant Fees Act.
While early drafts of the Renters’ Rights Act teased landlords with the right to mandate pet insurance, that provision was quietly axed before Royal Assent.
And under the Tenant Fees Act, a landlord cannot ask a tenant to buy a pet insurance policy, impose a separate pet fee or require the tenant to enter into a cleaning contract.
Requiring a prohibited payment can attract a civil penalty of up to £5,000. A further qualifying breach within five years can lead to prosecution or a thumping financial penalty of up to £30,000.
In theory, a landlord can recover reasonable cleaning costs where an inventory and check-out evidence prove an actual loss – but actually recovering the full amount may be a different story, particularly where the damage exceeds the deposit and the tenant has limited means.
Landlords are left relying on a deposit generally capped at five weeks’ rent, which may be nowhere near enough to meet extensive flooring, furnishing or odour damage.
If a cat decides to use the carpets as a scratching post or spray the floorboards, the cost of remediation will demolish that deposit, leaving the landlord to foot the bill.
To me, it looks like the law has shifted a substantial share of the practical financial risk from the pet owner to the property owner, leaving landlords to rely on their own insurance, the limited deposit or a potentially difficult claim against the tenant.
The other shame here is that the Labour government promised to ‘level the playing field’ between landlords and tenants.
We knew that wouldn’t be the case but the one-sided tilt in favour of renters is becoming clearer by the week.
Although landlords retain legal claims for pet damage, those rights may be expensive to enforce and worthless where the tenant has no recoverable assets.
The law has clearly strengthened the tenant’s position without giving the landlord an equivalent, readily usable financial safeguard.
If you own a leasehold property, check your superior lease immediately. The Renters’ Rights Act explicitly protects landlords bound by head-tenancy pet bans.
Just note: if your lease allows pets with freeholder consent, you must actively apply for that consent before you can legally turn your tenant down. Find out where you stand before a request lands.
Beyond that, refusals still stand if you can tie them to the specific animal and property: type, number, welfare or a genuine allergy in a shared building.
Welcome to the new age of being a landlord in the PRS, where the tenant gets the companionship, the charity gets the PR victory, and the landlord gets the repair bill.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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Member Since January 2022 - Comments: 2
2:11 PM, 20th June 2026, About 5 days ago
There are landlord insurance policies that include pet damage. You simply account for the cost of these when setting the rent. If you don’t want to do this, there are also policies that tenants can purchase.
Inspect the home regularly. If a pet causes damage that is beyond wear and tear and you can charge them and their deposit for it. I suggest offering homes unfurnished to limit the things you need to turn over when tenants leave.
And a friendly reminder, insurance is tax deductible.
Happy renting.
Member Since November 2022 - Comments: 3
2:37 PM, 20th June 2026, About 5 days ago
Most landlords aren’t anti-pet. They’re anti-unlimited liability !!!
My tenant did a moonlight flit (this was a property ‘managed’ by an agent). The dog smell hit me as soon as I opened the front door. The deposit didn’t even cover the 2 months rent arrears… let alone getting rid of the dog smell. It’s now on short lets… I manage it. There is a clean between stays. My mental health is much better now (don’t get me wrong short lets can be wild), but I had the place gutted… new kitchen, new bathroom, new carpets, new everything… I couldn’t take the risk of someone else coming in and destroying the place again. Although one guest did, by using a knife on the counter top (with no chopping board), so less than 2 months in, there’s now several long deep scratches on the counter top!!!
Its instances like this that do make me question why I bother? Is there an easier way in life? Should I just buy bitcoin and hope for the best? Put it in the stock market and aim for dividends? Go to Las Vegas… and put it all on red?!! Answers in the comments please!
Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 472
9:07 PM, 20th June 2026, About 4 days ago
Reply to the comment left by Sarah, Husmus at 20/06/2026 – 14:11
I had read here that landlord’s insurance for pet damage does not work well, perhaps someone will remind us.A tenant can take out pet insurance then cancel. In my experience pet damage far exceeds any deposit and inventory clerks/letting agents do fail to pick up hidden damage until it’s too late
Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 472
11:51 AM, 21st June 2026, About 4 days ago
Reply to the comment left by Lisa Newton at 20/06/2026 – 14:37
When you see the damage, time involved and cost which deposits don’t cover I think most landlords are anti pet.It’s not a tenants property so why should they worry and some do take advantage. “My father is ill can I take his little dog in” so what can you say.It then ends up as a zoo.
How much does a clean between short lets cost you and even then don’t they arrive with Fido.Knife cuts on worktops are usually classed as “fair wear and tear”.
Unless you rely on the income it would be less stressful not to rent anything.Will property prices bounce back in which case they have a long way to go, especially flats. The only people that seem to be buying are foreign investors who want high spec new builds and may not even let them, or those uplifting bungalows.Depends how much mortgage or cash you have.
Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 1238
3:57 PM, 21st June 2026, About 3 days ago
One of the most unfair aspects of this is that a landlords own allergies may not be a reasonable excuse on law, so landlords with allergies may face the extra financial burden of using an agent to avoid having to visit the property whilst the pet is present.