The UK government has revealed more details about the Renters’ Rights Bill which will see Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions being banned.
Section 21 is described in the update as a ‘scourge’ and the law is set to come into force next summer.
Landlords might also be alarmed at the prospect of £7,000 civil penalties for not signing up to the Private Rented Sector Landlord Ombudsman.
Repeat breaches of not joining the Ombudsman could see landlords being hit with a criminal prosecution and a fine of £40,000.
Also, councils will be handed a ‘package of investigatory powers’ to crackdown on criminal landlords.
Four months’ notice to gain possession
Other highlights for landlords include being required to give tenants four months’ notice to gain possession.
Though if the landlord or a family member wants to move in, possession can’t be sought in the first year of a new tenancy.
There are protections against excessive above-market rents with tenants able to appeal such rises.
The new Private Rented Sector Landlord Ombudsman will offer ‘quick, fair and impartial resolution’ for tenants’ complaints about their landlords.
Help landlords understand their legal obligations
The new Private Rented Sector Database will help landlords understand their legal obligations and demonstrate compliance.
It will also provide tenants with better information to make informed decisions when entering into a tenancy agreement.
There’s a strengthening of tenants’ rights to request a pet in their property, which landlords cannot unreasonably refuse.
Legal expectations when addressing serious hazards
The Bill will apply the Decent Homes Standard to the PRS and introduce ‘Awaab’s Law’ to set clear legal expectations when addressing serious hazards within specified timeframes.
It will also be illegal for landlords and agents to discriminate against prospective tenants who are in receipt of benefits or have children.
Abolish section 21 evictions and move to a simpler tenancy structure where all assured tenancies are periodic – providing more security for tenants and empowering them to challenge poor practice and unfair rent increases without fear of eviction. We will implement this new system in one stage, giving all tenants security immediately.
Ensure possession grounds are fair to both parties, giving tenants more security, while ensuring landlords can recover their property when reasonable. The bill introduces new safeguards for tenants, giving them more time to find a home if landlords evict to move in or sell, and ensuring unscrupulous landlords cannot misuse grounds.
Provide stronger protections against backdoor eviction by ensuring tenants are able to appeal excessive above-market rents which are purely designed to force them out. As now, landlords will still be able to increase rents to market price for their properties and an independent tribunal will make a judgement on this, if needed.
Introduce a new Private Rented Sector Landlord Ombudsman that will provide quick, fair, impartial and binding resolution for tenants’ complaints about their landlord. This will bring tenant-landlord complaint resolution on par with established redress practices for tenants in social housing and consumers of property agent services
Create a Private Rented Sector Database to help landlords understand their legal obligations and demonstrate compliance (giving good landlords confidence in their position), alongside providing better information to tenants to make informed decisions when entering into a tenancy agreement. It will also support local councils – helping them target enforcement activity where it is needed most. Landlords will need to be registered on the database in order to use certain possession grounds.
Give tenants strengthened rights to request a pet in the property, which the landlord must consider and cannot unreasonably refuse. To support this, landlords will be able to require pet insurance to cover any damage to their property
Apply the Decent Homes Standard to the private rented sector to give renters safer, better value homes and remove the blight of poor-quality homes in local communities.
Apply ‘Awaab’s Law’ to the sector, setting clear legal expectations about the timeframes within which landlords in the private rented sector must take action to make homes safe where they contain serious hazards.
Make it illegal for landlords and agents to discriminate against prospective tenants in receipt of benefits or with children – helping to ensure everyone is treated fairly when looking for a place to live.
End the practice of rental bidding by prohibiting landlords and agents from asking for or accepting offers above the advertised rent. Landlords and agents will be required to publish an asking rent for their property, and it will be illegal to accept offers made above this rate.
Strengthen local authority enforcement by expanding civil penalties, introducing a package of investigatory powers and bringing in a new requirement for local authorities to report on enforcement activity.
Strengthen rent repayment orders by extending them to superior landlords, doubling the maximum penalty and ensuring repeat offenders have to repay the maximum amount.
Reply to the comment left by havens havens at 27/09/2024 – 13:59
You will see your rent double. Just before the bill comes into force.
Very easy to tell when someone doesn’t know how the world works.
“I foresee a ….watering down/repeal of the bill.” I wish you were right. However, socialists do not understand how markets work. They will double down on their mistakes. Rent controls, anyone?
Punishing landlords for accepting a higher rental bid is crazy. The market price is what someone is prepared to pay. All that will happen is that instead of asking £1200 a month, landlords will seek “offers up to £1400” a month and take the highest. This will push rents up generally.
Exactly. But I think they will repeal or water down because I remember a few London boroughs that tried to introduce a landlord license and quickly withdrew it.
The only way to reduce rents is to reduce costs on landlords – period.
Every business passes on costs to the customer -why should this be any different?
I’ve found some pets leave a lot less mess and damage than tenants do. Anyway, the answer is simple – the pets should be referenced and credit checked too!!
Re’ ombudsman decisions. I’m sure there’ll be a backlog which could result in taking, weeks, months, years waiting for a decision! I’m sure this is to help the government – less homelessness equals less headache!
It all seems one sided to me. It appears that there are only rogue landlords and no rogue tenants. The legal system is so slow that the time taken to evict a tenant, aided and abetted by the local council housing department, will exceed the 6 months that it took me 20 years ago. This needs to be fair to both sides.
Reply to the comment left by Prospective Landlord at 27/09/2024 – 15:21 There is a housing emergency coming soon early in 2025 all self inflicted by Labour and their complete lack of understanding of free markets. Taking back state control is a load of nonsense if it creates a worse environment for tenants.
Registered with the Ombudsman! I’m selling everything. just sold my home too! taking ALL my cash back offshore. I have had several rounds with Ombudsman – the current is ongoing with Virgin Media business – only been going on incompetence since 2019. The recent one was April 2023 if you are an investor from Hong Kong / China in April 2023 they barred all clients from logging into our online billing. Then imposed a paper bill fee, finally they cut my supply resulting in the heating going off as I have a heating system. Just did a S21 – good riddance to the State Funded drug addict, on same rent for 5 years, threatening to stab people and tampered with the Meter. The grid and police did nothing. Council did nothing in Durham, they took money for a Selective License and did nothing – so much for licenses for Anti Social behaviour. just one scam after another ..
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Member Since September 2024 - Comments: 4
3:21 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by havens havens at 27/09/2024 – 13:59
You will see your rent double. Just before the bill comes into force.
Very easy to tell when someone doesn’t know how the world works.
Member Since July 2013 - Comments: 1996 - Articles: 21
3:41 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Prospective Landlord at 27/09/2024 – 15:13
“I foresee a ….watering down/repeal of the bill.” I wish you were right. However, socialists do not understand how markets work. They will double down on their mistakes. Rent controls, anyone?
Punishing landlords for accepting a higher rental bid is crazy. The market price is what someone is prepared to pay. All that will happen is that instead of asking £1200 a month, landlords will seek “offers up to £1400” a month and take the highest. This will push rents up generally.
Member Since September 2024 - Comments: 4
3:48 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Exactly. But I think they will repeal or water down because I remember a few London boroughs that tried to introduce a landlord license and quickly withdrew it.
The only way to reduce rents is to reduce costs on landlords – period.
Every business passes on costs to the customer -why should this be any different?
Member Since October 2019 - Comments: 391
6:01 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
I’ve found some pets leave a lot less mess and damage than tenants do. Anyway, the answer is simple – the pets should be referenced and credit checked too!!
Member Since October 2019 - Comments: 391
6:27 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Re’ ombudsman decisions. I’m sure there’ll be a backlog which could result in taking, weeks, months, years waiting for a decision! I’m sure this is to help the government – less homelessness equals less headache!
Member Since May 2021 - Comments: 389
6:58 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by LaLo at 27/09/2024 – 18:27
Of course it is, kicking the can down the road is their answer.
Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1575
7:53 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by LaLo at 27/09/2024 – 18:27
Delaying eviction doesn’t help homelessness. Not one iota.
It just means bad tenants have homes and potentially better tenants are homeless.
Member Since September 2023 - Comments: 2
9:25 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
It all seems one sided to me. It appears that there are only rogue landlords and no rogue tenants. The legal system is so slow that the time taken to evict a tenant, aided and abetted by the local council housing department, will exceed the 6 months that it took me 20 years ago. This needs to be fair to both sides.
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 317
9:41 PM, 27th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Prospective Landlord at 27/09/2024 – 15:21
There is a housing emergency coming soon early in 2025 all self inflicted by Labour and their complete lack of understanding of free markets. Taking back state control is a load of nonsense if it creates a worse environment for tenants.
Member Since July 2024 - Comments: 112
5:10 AM, 28th September 2024, About 2 years ago
Registered with the Ombudsman! I’m selling everything. just sold my home too! taking ALL my cash back offshore. I have had several rounds with Ombudsman – the current is ongoing with Virgin Media business – only been going on incompetence since 2019. The recent one was April 2023 if you are an investor from Hong Kong / China in April 2023 they barred all clients from logging into our online billing. Then imposed a paper bill fee, finally they cut my supply resulting in the heating going off as I have a heating system. Just did a S21 – good riddance to the State Funded drug addict, on same rent for 5 years, threatening to stab people and tampered with the Meter. The grid and police did nothing. Council did nothing in Durham, they took money for a Selective License and did nothing – so much for licenses for Anti Social behaviour. just one scam after another ..