3 weeks ago | 6 comments
Hello, I would appreciate other landlords’ views on a dispute I am having with my letting agent – a well-known national chain.
I have used them to manage my property for about four years and currently pay approximately £350 a month in management charges.
There have been several previous service issues, but the handling of my latest rent review has left me particularly frustrated.
The property was originally let for £1,850 a month. When I later decided to sell, the tenants were keen to remain and offered to increase the rent to £2,350 from December 2023.
I accepted and have not increased it since.
The agents suggested a further increase last year, but I decided to leave the rent unchanged and review it in 2026.
Earlier this year, they recommended increasing the rent by £100 to £2,450 as part of a proposed renewal due at the end of March.
I approved this and understood that the agents would contact the tenants and complete the process.
The renewal invitation was apparently sent on 3 February.
However, the agents have since admitted that no follow-up reminders were sent to the tenants and that I was not informed when they failed to respond.
The member of staff handling the matter was away for an extended period, and it says the issue was missed by colleagues monitoring her workload.
I first discovered there was a problem on 5 May, when the agents told me that the tenancy had become periodic and that no renewal or rent increase had been completed.
It initially said it would arrange a section 13 notice increasing the rent to £2,450.
The following day, however, they reversed its position.
It said the existing £2,350 rent was already above market value and cancelled the proposed increase.
It also warned that the tenants might challenge the rent at tribunal and referred to the possible risk of fines and a rent repayment order.
I questioned this because the agents had recommended the £2,450 rent.
I also asked repeatedly whether the tenants had ever responded to the original proposal.
I was told more than once that they had not.
A senior manager wrote that the tenants had “never responded to the original proposal of a rent increase”, despite saying she had reviewed the relevant emails.
I subsequently learned that the tenants had sent the agents a positive reply, saying: “We are extremely pleased and happy for another renewal.”
The agents have now admitted that this response was received but overlooked.
After initially saying £2,450 was above market value and too risky, the senior manager carried out further research and reversed that decision as well.
It now says £2,450 is achievable and has offered to serve a section 13 notice, with the new rent taking effect from 30 August.
It has also offered to waive its usual £150 plus VAT notice fee.
I accept that the tenants’ response may not, by itself, have completed a legally binding renewal or rent increase.
However, had the agents followed up properly before the end of March, I believe there was a realistic prospect that the agreement would have been completed before the law changed.
My concerns are that the agents:
I employ a managing agent as a company, rather than relying on one individual, precisely so that holidays or extended absences do not cause important matters to be missed.
I have proposed that the agents compensate me through a reduction in its management fees, backdated to 1 April, reflecting the rent increase I believe has been lost because of its admitted failure to manage the renewal properly.
The agents have not addressed that proposal directly.
Instead, it appears to regard its offer to waive the section 13 fee and serve a fresh notice as bringing the matter to a close.
Would other landlords accept that outcome, or should I pursue a formal complaint and, if necessary, take the matter to the agents’ redress scheme?
Would it be reasonable to seek compensation for the lost opportunity to increase the rent, even though I cannot prove with certainty that the tenants would have completed the agreement before 1 May?
I would also be interested to know whether other landlords consider the agents’ contradictory advice and inaccurate statements serious enough to justify changing managing agents.
Thank you,
Kelly
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3 weeks ago | 6 comments
3 weeks ago | 10 comments
3 weeks ago | 5 comments
Member Since November 2020 - Comments: 74
10:00 AM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Hi Kelly,
If you’re local enough I would be self managing. Only you could let yourself down. Those are hefty charges for questionable service.
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2261 - Articles: 2
10:09 AM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Dismiss the agent, since the RRA there is now no room for even the slightest error. Have you checked the validity of the EPC, EICR, Gas Cert, Right to rent, sanctions check etc? Any transgression could land you with a big fine for which you are responsible, there is no room for any errors at all.
As to compensation, you have lost £100 a month because of their incompetence, they must compensate you for that loss.
Member Since September 2020 - Comments: 17
1:00 PM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
The whole reason one has an agent is for their knowledge and skills of finding suitable renants and doiung the correct paperwork at the correct time and keeping each informed
Now told on NLA training sessions its the landlords responsibility to make sure the agent is doing what they should correctly
so what is the point of employing an agent if you have to be responsible for their mistakes
I spent 3.5 months rent to foxrtons in fees and commission for a letting last octobe no Rent until end of January 2026
I saw on my account a charge for 150 £ for checking to se if you have a licence
never informed of this charge they had a copy of the licence on file all they had to do was press the button and check The tenant was in situ I said to let in the first place you have to have a licence foxtons had asked for a copy and i would be contacted by the council in advance if it was about to expire
I commented that it is compulsory to have a vaikld gas electric and EPC so where are the charges for checking that
I said i would not pay and it will be the last letting they will have from us since 2016
Always check you charges on account
Member Since January 2022 - Comments: 105
1:15 PM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago
Reply to the comment left by Accommod8 at 24/06/2026 – 10:00
I totally agree, that excluding any charges for changes / new contracts, fees roughly of 10k for a very poor service, wow, I would say they owe you for such a poor service. As others have said, they owe at least £100 a month in credits and I wonder if they have kept the property paperwork up to date? #Worried, I hope all is well
Member Since June 2026 - Comments: 1
3:28 PM, 27th June 2026, About 2 weeks ago
Brutal sequence this. The bit that gets me is that the tenants did reply (“extremely pleased and happy for another renewal”) and the email just sat there. The senior manager said she had reviewed the emails. Clearly she hadn’t.
I spend a lot of my time helping landlords and small business owners untangle this kind of paperwork mess. A few small things that usually save people from exactly this:
Keep your own records folder, separate from the agent. One folder per property, subfolders by date. Every renewal proposal, every reply, every Section 13 draft, every EPC, EICR, Gas Safety and Right to Rent check. Takes maybe 10 minutes a month and it’s the only thing that consistently catches agent errors before they get expensive.
Put calendar reminders 90 days before every key date. Renewal end, EPC expiry, gas safety, EICR five year mark. Don’t trust the agent to remind you. If they go quiet, prompt them in writing. That email by itself becomes part of the paper trail.
Another commenter already said it, with the RRA now in force the margin for error is basically zero. The compensation claim for the lost £100 a month sounds fair, but the bigger win is making sure this never happens to you again.
Sorry you’re going through this. Exactly the kind of mess a clean paper trail prevents.