What actual problem did the Renters' Rights Act fix?

What actual problem did the Renters’ Rights Act fix?

Workers repairing cracked “problem” text symbolising concerns over the Renters’ Rights Act and rogue tenants
9:19 AM, 13th May 2026, 1 week ago 15

The vitriol directed at landlords has resulted in laws that protect rogue tenants to a quite remarkable degree, delaying their inevitable removal, often at the expense of the landlord’s health and well-being.

The truth is rogue tenants, people who disrespect the contract, then use the law to support their errant behaviour, are better served now than prior to the act. Landlords now more than ever need to protect themselves from rogue tenants by increasing the level of vigilance in very, very careful vetting. Once the rogue tenants are in, it is too late.

The problems the act purported to fix were much less prevalent than the politicians led us to believe, 0.5% (1 in 200), tenancies ended in bailiff eviction, but the media and MPs focused on single cases and hyped this as the norm, till it became the conventional wisdom.

A story was told that landlords were repeatedly raising rents to prey on vulnerable tenants, but this narrative was simply blowing smoke.

The government claimed to need a huge new act to address wrongs committed by lazy, greedy landlords. Namely, landlords raising rents unfairly and the tenants having no legal redress. The government chose to ignore that long before the Renters’ Rights Act came into effect, tenants could have a rent rise checked and reduced by the first-tier tribunal.

Also, for periodic tenancies, it was unlawful to raise rents more than once a year, despite banks being able to increase landlord costs or mortgages multiple times a year; landlords were already restricted.

The laws before the act were largely governed by the Housing Act 1988.

Under the Housing Act 1988, which previously governed most tenancies, rent increases for Assured Shorthold Tenancies (ASTs) in England already followed strict legal procedures.

For fixed-term ASTs, rent could only be increased if:

  • the tenancy agreement included a rent review clause; or
  • the tenant agreed to the increase.

For periodic (“rolling”) tenancies, landlords generally had to use a Section 13 notice (Form 4) to raise the rent.

There were also existing safeguards:

  • rent could usually only be increased once every 12 months;
  • landlords had to provide at least one month’s notice (or six months for yearly tenancies); and
  • tenants could challenge increases they believed exceeded market rates.

Importantly, tenants could apply to the First-tier Tribunal before the new rent took effect. The Tribunal would assess local market evidence and determine an appropriate market rent.

Crucially, prior to the new reforms, the Tribunal was also able to set the rent higher than the landlord’s proposed increase if it concluded the requested figure was still below market value. Any revised rent could also be backdated to the date specified in the landlord’s notice.

Given that landlords could already only increase rents within legal limits, and tenants already had access to independent legal redress, the question remains: What actual problem did the Renters Rights Act fix?

Crucially, in 2019, the Tribunal had the power to set a rent higher than what the landlord initially proposed if they felt the proposal was still below market value. The outcome the new rent usually applies from the date of the landlord’s notice, meaning it could be backdated.

Given a landlord can set the rent at market levels even now, what problem did the RRA fix? What does the Property118 community think?

Regards,

Paul


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Comments

  • Member Since July 2023 - Comments: 74

    12:42 PM, 15th May 2026, About 5 days ago

    Reply to the comment left by Franklin Price at 14/05/2026 – 18:01
    Except of course most Section 21 were rejected because of technicalities the system introduced all of which had no detrimental on the tenants. Eg a late deposit payment, the deposit prescribed information missing, a slight gap in has safety certs etc etc.

    High Rejection Rate Estimates: According to the Chairman of the London Association of District Judges, as many as 7 out of 10 (70%) Section 21 notices are thrown out of court because they are completed incorrectly.

  • Member Since August 2025 - Comments: 51

    11:55 AM, 16th May 2026, About 4 days ago

    Section21 never harmed good tenants,it was protection to save property from rogue tenants and to provide same accommodation to decent tenants. The law now made every tenant a decent one. That totally wrong how can anyone educated person was allowed to make it a law to say oh it’s the lanlords . Simple example is in this world no one is perfect otherwise there will be no crime and all these world leaders argue smongst themselves and don’t agree with another is the reason why
    countries are fighting amongst them selves. Instead of penalising both parties the RRA law is
    painting bed picture with lots of investments to close up soon.
    Joe

  • Member Since October 2016 - Comments: 19

    10:58 AM, 17th May 2026, About 3 days ago

    Well said Paul. All points that should have been drilled in to the electorate and legislators over the past 5 or so years. Sadly the NRLA really don’t seem to have the balls to lobby effectively. Time for a National Landlord Federation – fancy getting the ball rolling?

  • Member Since July 2023 - Comments: 74

    7:36 PM, 17th May 2026, About 3 days ago

    Thank you -David Yes – it’s quite remarkable that after years of discussion around the RRA the existing legislation wasn’t understood. Further false perceptions became the conventional wisdom and underpinned aggressive changes to the laws based on exaggerated narrative.

    Generations rent is much better at creating a fog that sticks than any landlord body was at dispelling false narratives.

    I have not sure why the NRLA didn’t lobby and debunk mischievous claims effectively, but in today’s climate it is more important the truth and facts are seen and acted on. Anything else is simply wasteful and regressive for tenants and landlords alike.

    There are good people out there, but despite making good arguments their voices are drowned out and sense overruled by nonsense. They simply were not effective at having a fair act implemented.

    You are quite right, there is a need for a competent landlord body that is the main point of reference and authority on things ‘landlord’ and fully represents landlords. I don’t think this has been the case for the RRA, EPC requirements, Mould legislation, Tax – in fact I can’t think of anything that has been done well. With new assaults planned on landlords such as rent rise restrictions, it is essential landlords are fairly represented if only to serve tenants better.

    Best wishes,

    Paul

  • Member Since May 2026 - Comments: 2

    11:24 PM, 18th May 2026, About 2 days ago

    it didnt solve anything

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