9:58 AM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago 15
Text Size
Categories:
Small landlords who care about their tenants will sell up in 2026 and be replaced by “money-motivated landlords” due to new regulations, claims legal experts.
The Daily Telegraph reports mounting regulations, such as the Renters’ Rights Act, will see small landlords exit due to high costs and increased council powers.
Under the Renters’ Rights Act, councils have the power to fine landlords up to £40,000.
Phil Turtle, compliance director from Landlord Licensing & Defence told The Telegraph: “Small landlords will inevitably be the first to sell up, worsening supply levels.
“What is already happening inevitably is that the older-style landlords who really cared about their tenants and providing decent homes for them will leave.
“New money-motivated landlords will replace them, but the focus will be on picking up properties cheap from distressed existing landlords and maximising profits.”
Mr Turtle warns that increased council powers will make it unprofitable for smaller landlords to remain in the market.
He said to The Telegraph: “Smaller landlords are going to quit the market. There are so many extra punitive fining opportunities under the Renters’ Rights Act for the councils’ money-making machine.
“Anyone with their pension tied up in property can only see the councils taking it away through massive fines for the most simple of mistakes.
“Now any slip-up on a tenancy agreement or the pre-tenancy paperwork is going to cost a minimum of £4,000 fine with, just like speeding, no leeway or compassion available from power-crazed councils enforcement officers.”
Paul Shamplina, founder and manager of legal firm Landlord Action, adds: “Self-managed landlords are more vulnerable to these penalties.
“More landlords will need to hire a letting agent, further eating away at profits.”
However, the government claim the reforms will help landlords and tenants.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government told The Telegraph: “Good landlords have nothing to fear from our Renters’ Rights Act
“Our landmark legislation will level the playing field by giving renters greater security in their homes, while landlords will benefit from a simpler tenancy system and stronger powers to take swift action against anti-social behaviour.”
However, as previously reported by Property118, industry experts have warned the Renters’ Rights Act will cause an “inevitable influx” of court cases, putting pressure on the courts.
Under the Renters’ Rights Act, Section 21 will be abolished, meaning landlords will need to rely on specific grounds for possession using Section 8 notices.
A spokesperson for the NRLA told Property118: “Wait times within the court system have become chronically over-extended over recent years, long before the government announced implementation dates for the Renters’ Rights Act.
“We expect that the introduction of the Act will lead to substantial, additional, increases in court wait times as a consequence of the removal of the accelerated procedure and increased complexity.
“As a result, we continue to urge the government to announce how they intend to reform the process ahead of the inevitable influx of cases into the court system. Without a coherent solution to this problem, there is a huge risk that the issues around court wait times will only be compounded by a lack of action”.
Every day, landlords who want to influence policy and share real-world experience add their voice here. Your perspective helps keep the debate balanced.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Downsize Government
Read Full Bio
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since February 2020 - Comments: 360
10:53 AM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
“Good landlords have nothing to fear”
Said the lion to the sheep.
Northernpleb
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 143
12:04 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Reply to the comment left by Downsize Government at 06/01/2026 – 10:53
Good Landlords will be forced out . So will Tens of Thousands of Good Tenants.
Northernpleb
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 143
12:13 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
If you try to evict someone for Rent Arrears even if its thousands of pound. The Rent Dodging Tenant will get all the resources of the Council , and Legal
System.
Peter Watson
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since March 2023 - Comments: 10
13:37 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Just approached the solicitors this morning to sell the first of 4 flats.
I am taking no chances doing this myself.
4 long term tenants, 3 years through to 14 years, but I have totally lost interest. All rents well below current rates.
The government, Red and Blue, have done this.
Darren Sullivan
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since September 2022 - Comments: 54
14:11 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Am I right in saying the corporate entities won’t be subject of the large fines ?
Northernpleb
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 143
14:36 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Reply to the comment left by Peter Watson at 06/01/2026 – 13:37
Hi Peter ,
I know how you feel some of mine have been with me 15 years or more.
The Renters Rights Bill is toxic.
Disillusioned Landlord
Read Full Bio
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since February 2024 - Comments: 53
18:40 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
These people are so out of touch with reality it’s scary. I don’t know how they sleep at night given the utter lies they spout, admittedly, probably in total ignorance.
The huge increases in taxation, legislation and administrative burden is killing the PRS. I’ve just lost over £10k trying to evict a tenant who was not even living in the house! Needles to say I’m selling it, just one instance like this wipes out years of anything made by being a landlord, and whith what the government have coming it’s only getting worse – sorry, I’m selling up like so many others.
Peter Merrick
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 190
22:48 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Reply to the comment left by Downsize Government at 06/01/2026 – 10:53
Exactly, these are people who are ideologically opposed to private landlords letting out property and believe that the words “good” and “landlord” are a contradiction of each other. But they can’t get rid of us all at once, so it is a death by a thousand cuts. The introduction of industrial-level fines on ordinary citizens for the slightest error makes the message perfectly clear that they want us out and only corporations and such like to run housing.
Jack Jennings
Read Full Bio
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 90
23:26 PM, 6th January 2026, About a month ago
Landlords who make mistakes have nothing to fear (as long as they are part of the Labour Party)..
The rest of us get no business concessions but potentially huge, immediate big business penalties.
I’m sure the government feel that “Thames Housing” will do a better job than us plebians…
Robin Wilson
You're Missing Out!
Members can reply to discussions, connect with experienced landlords, and access full member profiles showing years of expertise. Don't stay on the sidelines - join the UK's most active landlord community today.
Not a member yet? Join In Seconds
Login with
Member Since December 2024 - Comments: 58
8:19 AM, 7th January 2026, About a month ago
Margaret Thatcher once famously said that we have not rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain only to see them return under Brussels. Well, 35 years later and having left the EU, we are doing a pretty good job in bringing back the big state all by ourselves.
Remember, it was Thatcher’s Housing Act in 1988 that paved the way for market flexibility in the PRS that landlords have enjoyed ever since. Then Michael Gove and others proceeded to unravel it.