Rent in advance - why you shouldn't accept it?

Rent in advance – why you shouldn’t accept it?

Cash being exchanged for a house to illustrate debates over rent-in-advance rules
9:08 AM, 23rd December 2025, 4 months ago 44

We all know that the prohibition of rent in advance is going to make life really hard for tenants who, for whatever reason, can’t pass normal referencing and until now would have paid rent up front to get the place they want. So it’s natural that people are looking for ways to get around this. I think that’s a really dangerous thing for landlords to get involved in, and in this note, I explain why.

Basically, the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 controls when and how rent can be paid in advance, principally by making amendments to the Tenant Fees Act. (TFA).

For new assured periodic tenancies, the position is broadly as follows.

  • Any “pre‑tenancy” rent payment (ie rent paid before the tenancy agreement has been entered into by both parties) is now a prohibited payment under the Tenant Fees Act.
  • Landlords and agents must not “invite or encourage” a tenant, guarantor or other “relevant person” to make such a pre‑tenancy rent payment, and must not accept it if it is offered.
  • The only lawful pre‑tenancy payments remain the holding deposit and the tenancy deposit, within the existing TFA caps; “initial rent” can only be taken in a short “permitted pre‑tenancy period” once the tenancy has been entered into.
  • Any requirement in a new tenancy agreement that the tenant pays rent in advance (for example more than one month at a time, or before the first day of a rental period) is unenforceable.

Existing tenancies in place when the new regime starts can continue to operate on their current advance‑rent arrangements (eg 6‑monthly in advance).

One of the suggested avoidance routes is the payment of a lump sum rent in advance to a third party who will hold it in escrow, which basically means they hold it on trust with an explicit instruction to release it when certain conditions are met.

So the lump sum rent would be paid to an agent or a solicitor, someone like that, with instructions to release it in tranches, usually monthly, as each rent payment date comes up.

But the RRA is drafted with explicit anti‑avoidance language so that a landlord or agent cannot do indirectly, via a third party or escrow arrangement, what they are forbidden to do directly.

The prohibition applies to accepting a prohibited pre‑tenancy rent payment “from a tenant, guarantor or any other relevant person”. I know guidance isn’t supposed to have the force of law but in practice it does and it makes clear that paying rent to a third party (for example, an agent, an associate, or an escrow service) with instructions to release it to the landlord on rent‑due dates will still be treated as a prohibited pre‑tenancy rent payment if the money is rent and is paid before the tenancy is entered into or in excess of the permitted period/amount.

If a lump sum is not clearly rent for identified periods, there is a risk it is characterised as a tenancy deposit; any amount held as security above five weeks’ rent would then breach paragraph 2 of Schedule 1 to the Tenant Fees Act.

In short, routing rent via escrow or a third party before the tenancy is properly in force, or in an amount or timing that is not permitted, is treated as an unlawful attempt to circumvent the statutory restrictions.

As you might expect, given the government’s anti-landlord mindset, there are severe penalties for breach of these rules. Two types of penalty regime interact here: the TFA regime for prohibited payments and the general RRA civil‑penalty framework.

• A prohibited pre‑tenancy rent payment under the TFA can attract a civil penalty from the local authority of up to £5,000 for a first breach, rising to up to £30,000 for a further breach within five years, as an alternative to prosecution. So let’s assume your tenant sets up escrow payments and these start running. At some point you fall out with your tenant and they go to the local authority. If you’ve accepted 6 monthly payments from escrow then that’s you saddled with a £30,000 fine .
• Under the wider RRA enforcement framework, local authorities can impose civil penalties up to £7,000 for first or minor non‑compliance and up to £40,000 for serious or repeat non‑compliance, with the option in serious/repeated cases of criminal prosecution carrying an unlimited fine.
• Tenants and the local authority can also seek a rent repayment order for continuing or repeated breaches where the landlord fails to remedy the breach (for example, by not promptly returning a prohibited rent payment).

Always remember, local authorities now have a statutory duty (not just a power) to enforce “landlord legislation”, and they have a direct financial incentive to find breaches and enforce the payment of penalties because they will keep the cash.

Still fancy trying this way of getting rent in advance payments from tenants?

I don’t.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/asking-for-rent-in-advance-guidance-for-local-authorities/asking-for-rent-in-advance-guidance-for-local-authorities

Michael


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Comments

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 370

    9:41 AM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Hold on let me call my lawyer, in fact let me call him for absolutely everything regarding letting a property.
    Plain ridiculous and what is the reasoning behind this.Many prospective tenants will be on perfectly good salaries in secure jobs like teaching but won’t meet the “affordability” that letting agents require, meaning more tenants will be in effect “homeless”.STUPID GOVERNMENT.

  • Member Since February 2018 - Comments: 627

    11:36 AM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 23/12/2025 – 09:41
    ‘Stupid government’, not at all, knowingly mendacious, as are all the othe bodies and their acts that are making societies across the world dysfunctional, there is nobacciden, it is all orchestrated.

  • Member Since September 2023 - Comments: 22

    12:31 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    I recently had a prospective tenant and a friend view a house. The tenant was not in any way able to afford the property, so we didn’t go ahead.
    During our conversations with them, it came out that the friend worked in housing compliance at the local authority. They offered to pay rent upfront, which I said I believe is illegal. Now that financial penalties are going to be kept by the local authorities, and rent repayment orders and rent reviews immediately after taking on a tenancy may force rents to be reduced, there may be an incentive to fish for breaches of the new regulations and for people to act as “agent provocateur”. I made a comment on one of the landlord sites which was critical of my local authority. Next week, five inspection letters! They are not honest, balanced civil servants.What sad times to be a landlord or a tenant.

  • Member Since March 2022 - Comments: 137

    3:51 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Had a lady split up from her husband and wanted to pay a whole year upfront from her divorce proceeds so she can concrete on herself and daughter. She also worked full time. I accepted the offer and what role model tenant she was. End up staying for over 4 years until I sold that one due to S24. S21 issued and left on time no drams no issues, glowing reference from me to next LL. Now please tell me why this practice is banned? I only sold because of S24 forced me to. Rent up front has genuine reasons, this is now bad for tenants and landlords.

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 13

    6:42 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    I had a young lady tenant with a small baby some years ago who had split up with her boyfriend. The boyfriend had the means to pay for the property and paid 6 months in advance to make sure she had somewhere to stay.
    By the time the tenancy had come to an end they had reconciled and she moved back in with him.
    Everyone happy but now it’s a crime. Hey Ho.

  • Member Since October 2024 - Comments: 189

    9:29 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    The prohibition of advance rent is from 1st May 2026. Currently it is possible to take rent in advance. So if the tenancy continues well after May, and I have already taken rent up to July, would this be illegal? Now the tenants have stated that they wish to stay 2 to 3 months longer so until September or October. Would it be ok to ask for rent by March/April 2026 and give a S21 for them to leave in October at the latest.
    This means I shall never be able t have students from abroad.
    We will not be able to accomodate students from abroad, unless they have jobs that paid sufficient amount to pay rent.

  • Member Since October 2024 - Comments: 189

    9:56 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 23/12/2025 – 09:41
    Yes, total stupidity of the government. They dont understand letting business at all. No communication with the landlords, tenants, letting agents etc. They are making laws in a vaccum. Citizens dont count, how are we accepting their governance.
    Surely there needs to be an uproar about these stupid laws.

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 370

    11:10 PM, 23rd December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Tiger at 23/12/2025 – 21:56
    I understood Reforms manifesto would tear up this RRB, but would that get pass the Lords now that Starmer is filling it with more Labour peers. I was corrected when I said stupid government as they know exactly what they are doing in order to clear out small private landlords, as well as attacking small businesses.Councils are now buying back at a huge loss to the taxpayer properties sold under Right to Buy.

  • Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1013

    12:41 AM, 24th December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Tiger at 23/12/2025 – 21:56

    They’re not stupid – this cold, calculated & deliberate.

  • Member Since December 2025 - Comments: 6

    8:50 AM, 24th December 2025, About 4 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 23/12/2025 – 09:41
    I know wiser after reading the original posting, are they saying I can no longer ask for a month rent in advance?

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