Tenants told how to challenge landlords with rent repayment orders

Tenants told how to challenge landlords with rent repayment orders

Rent repayment notice with cash, house keys and documents symbolising landlord penalties
9:37 AM, 9th April 2026, 3 weeks ago 11

The government has released guidance for tenants on challenging landlords through rent repayment orders.

Under the Renters’ Rights Act, landlords face tougher penalties, with the maximum amount of rent they can be ordered to repay doubling from 12 to 24 months.

The government has also published separate guidance for tenants on the court eviction process under the Act.

Tenants can prove an offence has been committed

The government says the guidance is “primarily intended for tenants in the private rented sector, but councils may also find it useful when applying for Rent Repayment Orders.”

The government guidance explains that tenants can challenge their landlord by proving an offence has been committed, such as operating an unlicensed HMO or failing to obtain a selective licence.

According to the government guidance, tenants can check whether a landlord has committed an offence by:

  • Typing the name of their council followed by “landlord licensing scheme” into a search engine to find details of any schemes in place.
  • Searching for the council’s “landlord licensing register”. The guidance notes that some councils publish a public register of licensed properties, while others do not. If a property does not appear, this does not necessarily mean it is unlicensed, as registers may not always be up to date.
  • Contacting the council directly if the property cannot be found on the register.

The government guidance advises tenants to also include the address, the dates they lived at the property and the number of unrelated people they shared the home with

It also says tenants should ask the council:

  • whether the property is licensable
  • if so, whether it currently holds a licence under any local scheme
  • whether a valid licence application or Temporary Exemption Notice (TEN) has been submitted
  • and, if applicable, the effective date of that application or TEN

Selective licence offence

The government guidance says that to prove a landlord has committed an offence by failing to hold a selective licence, tenants must show:

  • the council had a selective licensing scheme covering the property
  • the property was privately rented
  • the landlord did not hold a licence

It explains that tenants should include evidence in their application bundle such as:

  • a copy of the council’s licensing scheme and confirmation it covered their postcode
  • proof the property was privately rented, including witness statements, tenancy agreements and deposit documents
  • confirmation from the council that the property was not licensed

The guidance also advises including supporting material such as communications with the landlord or letting agent.

Elsewhere in the guidance, it gives a list of the defences landlords may use such as reasonable excuse. The guidance says: “To argue this successfully, the First Tier Tribunal needs to be satisfied that the landlord has a valid reason for not meeting the legal requirement.”

Severe consequences for landlords

As previously reported by Property118, Landlord Licensing & Defence expert Des Taylor warns rent repayment orders are a serious offence with potentially severe consequences for landlords.

He said: “Rent repayment orders are strict liability offences. If a property was unlicensed when the law required one, the landlord is guilty regardless of whether the agent failed them or they were unaware of the requirement.”

The only defence, Mr Taylor says, is to have the evidence that proves the landlord’s case.

This means time-stamped proof of a licence application, payment receipts, bank statements, council acknowledgements and detailed phone call records. Without this, the tribunal will take the council’s word that no valid licence existed.


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Comments

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 377

    12:11 PM, 9th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    A charter for snitches and free money.Why would a tenant worry if a property was licenced or not!
    What about all the tenants suffering from poor council housing, will they be able to claim rent rebates.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2204 - Articles: 2

    12:50 PM, 9th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    “Rent repayment orders are strict liability offences. If a property was unlicensed when the law required one, the landlord is guilty regardless of whether the agent failed them or they were unaware of the requirement.”
    Unless you are Rachel Reeves!

  • Member Since September 2018 - Comments: 3549 - Articles: 5

    1:24 PM, 9th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    NB – rent repayments only apply to rent ACTUALLY paid by the tenant. In the case of benefits tenants this is only the ‘top up’ they may have paid to meet the full rent obligation. Any rent paid by benefits direct to the LL on behalf of the tenant is not counted.

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1591

    3:57 PM, 9th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    The offences that could lead to a rent repayment order are clearly listed and easily avoided.

    The penalty is wholly disproportionate.

  • Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 1186

    10:21 AM, 10th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 09/04/2026 – 15:57
    “The offences that could lead to a rent repayment order are clearly listed and easily avoided.”

    Not if your tenant creates a category 1 hazard, turning the property into a sauna by not ventilating it, and then claims an RRO for the resultant black mold.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2204 - Articles: 2

    1:00 PM, 10th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by DPT at 10/04/2026 – 10:21
    Exactly that happened to me. It took two years and the best part of £20,000 to fight the case and get her evicted. And this was without a fine from the local council or rent repayment order.

  • Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 1186

    4:10 PM, 10th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    I just had a look at the guide, which specifically references circumstances where a landlord has been unable to prove a ground 7A or ground 14 possession claim for ASB as “reckless misuse of a possession ground”, potentially incurring both a civil penalty and a rent repayment order. Given this punitive regime, landlords may have to resist calls from neighbours, the Council or even the police to try to evict the tenant unless they are certain they have an iron-clad case and and those affected have already supplied written witness statements

  • Member Since May 2023 - Comments: 25

    7:55 AM, 11th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by The_Maluka at 10/04/2026 – 13:00
    You were the victim of Awabs Law.
    An Eatheopian family from a hot climate never opened the windows of their Council property.
    As it was their “For ever home” it was not inspected by the Council.
    Angela Rayner (when not tax dodging) introduced this entirely needless piece of “red tape” and wishes to roll it out to the PRS.
    Regular inspections and requiring your tenant to switch off the heating and open the windows once a week for an hour to change the air, should keep the black mold at bay.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2204 - Articles: 2

    8:13 AM, 11th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    State sponsored bullying

  • Member Since May 2023 - Comments: 25

    9:01 AM, 11th April 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by The_Maluka at 11/04/2026 – 08:13
    Sadly we are the only industry which The State tells citizens how to use the law against the provider.
    I await the arrival of “how to get your money back from your local drug dealer”.
    Landlords are treated worse than criminals.

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