8:34 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago 50
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The government has released new civil penalty tables under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025, and the figures are outrageous. The official guidance, published this week on GOV.UK, sets out a scale of fines that start at £3,000 and climb to £35,000 for the most serious breaches. Many of these offences were previously treated as routine compliance matters. They now come with penalties that will feel closer to corporate regulation than traditional housing enforcement.
The largest penalties stand out immediately. A breach of a banning order carries a starting figure of £35,000. Using a possession ground that the landlord “knew or should have known” could not be met attracts a penalty of £30,000. Reletting a property during a no-let period is marked at £25,000. Even administrative failures, such as entering a selective licensing area without the correct licence, are set at £12,000.
These numbers land at a time when operating margins have already been eroded by increased regulatory overhead. The message is hard to miss. Compliance is no longer a procedural expectation, it is becoming a major financial risk factor. That change will shape the decisions of every landlord, whether they own one property or several hundred.
A comparison with other UK penalty regimes is also revealing. Many workplace safety offences attract lower penalties than the amounts now set for common licensing breaches. A failure to meet gas safety obligations in a rental property can trigger fines larger than penalties issued to companies that mishandle hazardous equipment. Even misleading rent advertisements carry a penalty of £4,000, which is more severe than fines issued for a range of trading offences in small businesses.
Landlords will question the fairness of these discrepancies. A documentary oversight or a misfiled possession claim may now result in a penalty that exceeds fines levied against regulated businesses in sectors with far higher operational risks. That tension will amplify political and industry debate, because the contrast is difficult to ignore once the figures are placed side by side.
Local authorities are likely to respond quickly. The guidance allows councils to retain revenue from civil penalties to support further enforcement activity. This creates a self-funding model that did not exist with the same clarity before. Enforcement teams that once struggled with budget constraints may now be encouraged to act more frequently and more assertively. Councils will focus on licensing, documentation, advertising and property condition, because these areas now offer significant financial return.
Lenders will take notice as well. A single penalty of £20,000 or more can alter the affordability profile of a portfolio. Breaches involving possession grounds will catch particular attention, because lenders rely on orderly tenancies to control arrears risk. Insurers will likely tighten underwriting for landlords who self-manage or operate in older properties, especially where documentation or licensing may be inconsistent.
Letting agents will face new pressures. The guidance implies shared responsibility in several areas, and agents who manage documentation or advertising on behalf of landlords could be scrutinised more closely. This will push agencies to adopt stricter internal controls, which may in turn increase costs for landlords who rely on full management services.
Tenants will experience the changes too. Councils will intervene earlier in disputes. Penalties allow enforcement without court delays, which means issues around licensing or documentation are likely to escalate more quickly than before. Some tenants will welcome the added oversight. Others may find that the heightened rules lead landlords to withdraw from riskier areas of the market.
Professional advisers will warn landlords to treat possession decisions with far more caution. The £30,000 penalty for relying on the wrong ground introduces a subjective test that invites argument over what a landlord “should have known”. That point alone will generate litigation, appeals and case law in the years ahead.
The guidance signals a tougher era. It reflects a political intention to make enforcement more visible and more costly. For landlords, it introduces a level of regulatory exposure that feels disproportionate when placed alongside penalties used in other sectors.
This is the landscape now set before the private rented sector. Success will belong to those who tighten their compliance processes, document every decision and treat governance as a central part of property management. The figures published this week send a clear warning. Mistakes will carry serious consequences, and the financial risks of non-compliance have never been higher.
| Offence | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Unlawful eviction and harassment (s1(2) and (3)) | £35,000 |
| Breach | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Attempting to let the property for a fixed term (s16E(1)(a)) | £4,000 |
| Attempting to end the tenancy by service of a notice to quit (s16E(1)(b)) | £6,000 |
| Attempting to end the tenancy orally, or require that it is ended orally (s16E(1)(c)) | £6,000 |
| Serving a possession notice that attempts to end the tenancy outside of the prescribed section 8 process (s16E(1)(d)) | £6,000 |
| Relying on a ground where the person does not reasonably believe that the landlord is/will be able to obtain possession (s16I(1)(e)) | £6,000 |
| Failing to provide a tenant with prior notice that a ground which requires it may be used (s16E(1)(f)) | £3,000 |
| Failing to issue a written statement of terms within 28 days of an assured tenancy coming into existence (s16D) | £4,000 |
| Failing to provide an existing tenant with prescribed information about changes made by the Renters’ Rights Act (paragraph 7 of schedule 6 to the Renters’ Rights Act 2025) | £4,000 |
| Offence | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Relying on a ground knowing the landlord would not be able to obtain possession or being reckless as to whether they would (s16J(1)) | £30,000 |
| Reletting or remarketing a property within the 12 month no-let period after using the moving or selling grounds (s16J(2)) | £25,000 |
| Continuing breach, or repeat breach committed within 5 years of receiving a penalty for first breach (s16J(3) and (4)) | Double the starting level for the two constituent breaches added together |
| Offence | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Failure to comply with an improvement notice (s.30(1)) | £25,000 |
| Mandatory HMO unlicensed (s.72(1)) | £17,000 |
| Additional HMO unlicensed (s72 (1)) | £17,000 |
| Knowingly permitting over-occupation of an HMO (s.72(2)) | £20,000 |
| Property subject to selective licensing unlicensed (s.95(1)) | £12,000 |
| Failure to comply with an overcrowding notice (s.139(7)) | £20,000 |
| Breach of HMO management regulations (SI 2006/372 and SI 2007/1903 (in respect of s257 HMOs) made under s234(1)) | |
| Failure to provide information to the occupier (regulation 3) | £3,000 |
| Failure to take safety measures (regulation 4) | £20,000 |
| Failure to maintain water supply and drainage (regulation 5) | £10,000 |
| Failure to supply and maintain gas and electricity or supply gas safety certificate (regulation 6) | £12,000 |
| Failure to maintain common parts (regulation 7) | £7,000 |
| Failure to maintain living accommodation (regulation 8) | £7,000 |
| Failure to provide adequate waste disposal facilities (regulation 9) | £7,000 |
No starting point for civil penalties for breaches of licensing conditions under sections 72(3) and 95(2) of the Housing Act 2004 are set out in this guidance, as those conditions may vary substantially between local authorities. Local housing authorities will need to determine and publish their own starting levels for civil penalties for these offences.
| Offence | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Breach of a banning order (s.21(1)) | £35,000 |
| Breach | Civil penalty |
|---|---|
| Discrimination against those on benefits or with children in the lettings process (s.33 and s.34) | £6,000 |
| Failure to specify proposed rent within a written advertisement or offer (s.56(2)) | £3,000 |
| Inviting, encouraging or accepting any offer of rent greater than the advertised rate (s.56(3)) | £4,000 |
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Paul Essex
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Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 686
8:41 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
And yet they expect small landlords to continue in the business.
These fines are way higher than those dished out to petty criminals and drug dealers it’s simply the politics of envy – applied by those with guaranteed pension income.
Neil Patterson
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Member Since February 2011 - Comments: 3448 - Articles: 286
9:13 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
For context, the maximum court-imposed fine for speeding in a 30 mph zone is capped at £1,000, even in extreme cases where a driver is recorded at more than 100 mph.
Magistrates can add a driving ban and other penalties, but the statutory fine limit for non-motorway speeding remains £1,000.
Source: https://www.gov.uk/speeding-penalties
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Member Since January 2011 - Comments: 12120 - Articles: 1358
9:14 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
Reply to the comment left by Neil Patterson at 11/12/2025 – 09:13
For completeness, it is worth remembering that housing law already includes a form of prohibition similar in principle to a driving ban.
Under the Housing and Planning Act 2016, a local authority can ask the First-tier Tribunal to impose a banning order after a landlord has been convicted of a relevant offence. A banning order prevents the person from letting or managing property in England for at least twelve months. Any licences they hold must be revoked and their details are entered on the national rogue landlord database.
This is one of the most serious sanctions available in the sector and sits alongside the new civil penalty regime described in the guidance.
The_Maluka
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Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2123 - Articles: 1
9:58 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
Fining landlords punishes tenants.
John
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Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 12
10:01 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
Surely these large fines will result in more homeless. As an example if heaven forbid I was fined £35000 I would have to sell the property to pay the fine.
After all this is equal to 1 years average salary. Who has this money sitting around?
Richard Alexander
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Member Since March 2023 - Comments: 6
10:05 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
Does this apply to Social Landlords and Councils because if so they will be bankrupted as they are some of the worst offenders.
LaLo
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Member Since October 2019 - Comments: 375
10:17 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
They missed out ‘failure to insert a full stop at the end of a sentence = £10000000 fine ! That’s abut all that’s left! I see on the news that homeless numbers are at record levels – I wonder why ???? It’s all about money!
moneymanager
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Member Since February 2018 - Comments: 627
10:30 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
Anyone still think that we, not landlords, but all British citizens, are not at war with this globalist controlled ‘government’, it’s more like Bolshevik Russia or the depths of the ‘French’ revolution.
Elena Sh
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Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 21
10:39 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
These traitors in government want money to supply Ukrainian corruption
David
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Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 258
10:41 AM, 11th December 2025, About a month ago
My blood is boiling.Frankly in a “free country” you should be able to let out your own property, which you have already paid stamp duty TAX on without any conditions, especially if you are not classified as a business, which many are not and this is way out of line and over the top. Does “rent a room” attract the same penalties? Obviously this Labour government wants private landlords out an is policing it like a fascist/communist state.It will come back to bite tenants and the likes of Shelter and Gen rent have much to answer for.