The Renters' Rights Act is a political victory and a disaster for tenants

The Renters’ Rights Act is a political victory and a disaster for tenants

Knight-themed Landlord Crusader logo symbolizing landlord advocacy
9:17 AM, 14th November 2025, 5 months ago 28

This isn’t the article I had planned but I couldn’t decide after waking up today whether I was caught in some weird fever dream now that we know when the Renters’ Rights Act will come in.

I might be shooting from the lip here but don’t believe anyone who says the Act is a triumph for fairness.

It’s not even a rebalancing of power or ‘levelling the playing field’ between landlords and tenants.

Beneath the government and tenant campaign groups slapping themselves on the back there’s an unavoidable truth that’s about to slap them in the face.

This legislation will end up punishing the very people it claims to protect.

And, in the unlikely possibility that tenant campaigners or Labour ministers are reading this, you have caused the biggest disaster to tenants for years.

Landlords are ordinary people

Let’s get one thing straight: most landlords are not ideologues. We don’t do lobbying though others say they do on our behalf.

We are just ordinary people trying to run a business in an increasingly hostile environment.

Many landlords will be looking at the new implementation date for the rules and wondering whether it’s still worth the effort.

I imagine that examination will be more urgent when we hear what’s in the Autumn Budget.

Because strip away the Labour Party rhetoric and you’re left with something far more volatile than a tenants’ charter.

The government and tenants will be left with a system that risks throttling supply, putting up rents and creating a rental market where only the most financially stable applicants stand a chance of finding a home.

Landlords will sell

This isn’t me scaremongering; it’s basic economics. When rules make it harder to manage risk, the providers of housing will retreat.

I’ve mentioned before that bringing in an annual restriction on rent rises and offering tenants a way to challenge a rise is effectively a rent cap.

And then there’s the ban on Section 21 which removes the only straightforward, predictable route for regaining possession at the end of a tenancy.

The government insists the new grounds will be ‘stronger’, but every landlord knows how clogged, slow and costly the court process already is.

I’m looking forward to the data that shows the real reasons why many tenants are being evicted.

Then there’s the elephant in the room, which is landlords don’t have to be landlords.

We aren’t offering a home with a sense of social justice because we don’t want to see families on the streets.

We want to do this because we see this as an effective way to prepare for retirement or build generational wealth.

But with this implementation date in place, I can predict lots of landlords will throw in the towel.

And when they sell, that’s a home lost to the PRS, unless another landlord steps in.

Higher rents are coming

Yet this is the part politicians never seem to grasp because landlords leaving means fewer homes, and that means higher rents.

We will be looking at cautious landlords moving towards extreme selectivity.

If it becomes difficult or near impossible to recover possession from a problematic tenancy, landlords will tighten their criteria.

They will favour older tenants with stable incomes, spotless references and the deposit.

Younger renters, those with irregular earnings, students, single parents, migrant workers, the self-employed, people on benefits or anyone with a credit wobble, risk being filtered out long before they even reach a viewing.

Tenant groups will call this discrimination.

They can call it what they want, but landlords will call it self-preservation.

Reasons for homelessness

What makes the situation even more troubling and the reason that attracts most publicity is the government’s claim that Section 21 is the engine of homelessness.

It isn’t because the main causes of homelessness, according to councils themselves, are family breakdowns, domestic abuse, evictions from asylum accommodation and the ending of informal living arrangements.

Private rented sector evictions are a fraction of the picture.

But I guess we are politically easy to target, so we get branded as the enemy.

Meanwhile, councils are now expected to enforce tougher rules with heavier fines, more investigatory duties and a new regulatory landscape they can barely afford to police.

That will mean inconsistent enforcement, frustrated tenants and bewildered landlords. It will certainly not mean a healthier, more functional market.

RRA is a government mismanagement masterpiece

I’m sorry to say that if the intention was to terrify every good landlord out of the sector, the government may have delivered a masterpiece.

Which brings us to the real irony of Labour ministers saying tenants deserve more choice, more stability and more affordability.

It is they who have introduced a system likely to achieve the opposite.

If the goal was to help renters, the starting point should have been more housing supply.

That’s how you improve conditions and competition to deliver lower rents and better homes.

Not by shrinking the pool of available properties and hoping regulation fills the gap.

The most tragic part is that tenants have been promised protection, but they’ll get scarcity.

The government wanted to hand tenants more power, but it’s actually giving them fewer options and higher rents.

If this is the victory for tenants, I can’t imagine what defeat looks like.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


Share This Article

Comments

  • Member Since October 2019 - Comments: 401

    2:17 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    As usual, Those shouting for the roof tops they’re going to put everything right – and offer little else. I flatly refuse the RRA is real. It’s the funniest thing I’ve heard since Ken Dodd. It can’t be true. It’s all a myth. As Thatcher once said No, No, No!

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 620

    2:28 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by LaLo at 14/11/2025 – 14:17
    The RRA is real and it is back to the future for some of us, who have experienced this before.

  • Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 145

    3:25 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    ironic that the commencement date is may first. Landlords throughout the Kingdom are saying “Mayday, mayday, mayday”. Its a poorly thought out piece of legislation. Labour thinks it will be a vote winner but the supply of family sized homes is likely to fall and rents rise. Landlords serving s21s now have another six months to apply for a possession order. Often the problem is not arrears.A big problem is tenants taking in “lodgers” so as to create unlicensed HMOs. And the landlord might very well not know but become liable for fines due to the tenants breaches

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 374

    7:42 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 14/11/2025 – 12:10
    I even have my doubts Blackrock etc are interested in this market at all, it’s too messy.

  • Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 145

    8:42 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    another example of Government intervention achieving the exact opposite of what was intended, to improve the rental sector for tenants

  • Member Since January 2021 - Comments: 52

    9:07 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    In my local paper (EDP) yesterday was an article about Zive Capital – a funding group for residential assets – is developing a fairly large site in the middle of Norwich for 432 homes of mixed residential – flats and family homes for rent only (none to buy) – obviously they will not be subject to the same S24 and other tax laws that smaller Landlords are now exposed to thanks to George Osborne. I do not think it is a conspiracy theory – they definitely want us out to benefit their friends in big business. The Financial Times also reported on this trend at the end of last year – https://www.ft.com/content/5af7d6eb-1d2c-4298-81d0-b3a71bcfd953

  • Member Since January 2016 - Comments: 473

    10:36 PM, 14th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 14/11/2025 – 12:10
    It’s not that the big companies want to take over the hotch potch of houses here and there it’s that they want them out of the way so there is no choice and no comparison that causes people to ask, ‘Why does this place cost so much to rent when the place down the road is similar but 2/3 the rent?’

    As for Labour disliking large corporates, fantasy Labour maybe or Labour 50 years’ ago…

    https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/dark-money-investigations/lovebombed-by-lobbyists-how-starmer-labour-became-the-party-of-big-business/

  • Member Since November 2016 - Comments: 37

    8:47 AM, 15th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    The leading cause of homelessness was Section 21. That’s gone now so that’s problem solved, obviously…

  • Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1

    12:12 PM, 15th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 14/11/2025 – 12:10
    Not sure I agree that they are not interested in individual homes. Following the collapse of Fannie Mae, Blackrock and similar Wall street firms have bought over 500,000 ordinary homes in America for rental purposes. This has added to the PRS there and also pushed up property prices

  • Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 782

    5:30 PM, 15th November 2025, About 5 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Nigel Atkinson at 15/11/2025 – 12:12
    True but in the US an armed police unit does evictions on behalf of landlords – a very different scenario to the UK one.

Have Your Say

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

or

Related Articles