Why the Renters’ Rights Bill will create a ‘perfect’ tenant crisis for Labour

Why the Renters’ Rights Bill will create a ‘perfect’ tenant crisis for Labour

9:38 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago 18

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As the Renters’ Rights Bill heads back to the Lords next week, I fear there is now real potential to reshape the rental market in ways that could harm the very tenants it aims to protect.

Far from delivering the promised security and fairness to renters, the Bill risks creating a two-tier system where only ‘perfect’ tenants – those with impeccable credit, stable long-term employment and flawless references – will secure homes.

Vulnerable groups, including international students, self-employed professionals, pet owners, and those on benefits, face being excluded entirely, while landlords grapple with reduced control and greater financial risks.

But still the tenant groups are oblivious to what is coming down the track – Generation Rant again had a pop at landlords this week, saying we can leave.

Critics like them just can’t understand that a landlord selling up means there will be fewer properties to rent. Don’t talk about it being OK because a first-time buyer will step in. Unless they have a cracking income and a perfect credit score, that won’t happen.

PRS is complex

So, while the Bill says it will equalise the PRS by banning Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions, introducing rolling periodic tenancies and prohibiting discrimination against families or benefit recipients., it fails to account for the complex realities of the market.

Labour wilfully fails to see the real-world impact of abolishing fixed-term contracts, replaced by tenancies where tenants can leave with just two months’ notice which strips landlords of the ability to plan for re-letting or property management.

This uncertainty is compounded by the Bill’s cap on advance rent at one month, a measure that removes a critical lifeline for tenants who rely on upfront payments to offset weak credit or lack of UK references.

International students, migrants and those with past financial difficulties, are among those already struggling to find a home and they will find it nearly impossible to secure tenancies as landlords prioritise low-risk applicants.

Short-term renters face even greater challenges. Without fixed-term tenancies, landlords are unlikely to accommodate tenants whose employment lacks long-term stability in a single location.

The private student rental market, particularly for non-HMO or non-purpose-built student accommodations, is at risk of collapsing entirely.

Without fixed terms aligned to academic years, landlords may deem students too risky, given their ability to leave at short notice.

This could shrink the supply of private student housing, forcing students into already oversubscribed (and pricey) purpose-built student accommodation or leaving them without viable options. More students will, inevitably, be forced to stay at home for their studies.

Must accept pets

Similarly, while the Bill allows tenants to request pets, a Labour amendment, as reported by Property118 this week, looks like mandating landlords to accept them. This is just nonsense on stilts.

I’ll be waiting keenly for the first alligator to be kept in a tiny flat. It will happen because the tenant ‘will have the right’ to do so!

With tenants able to exit tenancies from day one, landlords may hesitate to rent to pet owners, fearing property damage that costs more than a single month’s rent to repair. This will lead to the exclusion of pet-owning tenants.

My other issue that isn’t being appreciated – but, by God, it will be – is that court-appointed bailiffs already take more than six months to secure possession, which will be on top of a year’s worth of rent arrears.

The government’s silence on court capacity for dealing with evictions after the Bill is implemented is also a critical oversight. And a shameless one at that.

Inevitably, landlords and agents will– regardless of what the Bill’s aims are – prioritise tenants with pristine credit profiles and a permanent job. Plus, they will need strong references from a previous landlord.

However, this will create a ripple effect: higher rents, reduced availability and fierce competition for the few remaining properties.

Organisations like Generation Rent dismiss concerns about a landlord exodus but that ignores the financial and emotional toll on landlords, many of whom rely on rental income for their livelihoods or pensions.

Bill’s unintended consequences

For those who support the Bill, please appreciate its unintended consequences which include the sharp decline in short-term and flexible lets, landlords selling up due to loss of tenancy control and the exclusion of tenants with poor credit, no references or irregular income.

But the uncertainty around court delays and possession processes may well be the final nail in the PRS’ coffin.

When gaining Royal Assent, we will see the Renters’ Rights Bill creating a market where only the ‘perfect’ tenant thrives, while everyone else – that’s students, freelancers, pet owners and benefit recipients – faces exclusion.

Without urgent revisions, the Bill will not empower renters but will instead lock them out, leaving landlords and tenants to navigate a broken system.

Tenants, please understand that landlords are not the enemy; we provide essential housing in a market already stretched thin.

Squeezing us too hard will only fuel rent rises and reduce supply, hurting the very tenants the Bill seeks to protect. Is that something you would vote for?

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Rod

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10:10 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Looking for Starmer?

I think he's at Henley getting coaching on rowing back [on yet another key policy]

A year in and no evidence of delivery of all those new homes we were promised - partly due to government wage settlements holding back the pace of BoE rate cuts and the raised stamp duty rates for investors in residential property.

Gromit

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10:17 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

This what the big corporate Landlords, who a pulling Government's strings, want ever increasing rents, dwindling private rental supply and increasing demand.

Jason

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10:56 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

I’m ready for 2-tier. I’m scrutinising a lot harder than ever before. Only gold standard tenants from now on.

moneymanager

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11:18 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

The mandatory periodic tenancy raised its head with an applicant two days ago, absolutely nothing wrong with the tenants personally or financially, in many ways can ideal tenant but,,,,, they asked if I could remove the sofa. I have previously let the same flat fully unfurnished. Enter second applicant who, out of the gate, is talking of two to three stay compared to the 'probable' year but possibly six months if the First, the choice is a no brainer.

moneymanager

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11:20 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Reply to the comment left by Rod at 27/06/2025 - 10:10
Very likely but as with many rowing teams it's the cox that keeps it all going, who's pulling Starmer's strings?

NewYorkie

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11:46 AM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Will the RRB change the amount of the deposit a landlord can take?

There is a damning article in the Sunday Times on the state of our courts. It refers to Crown and Magistrates, but the knock on to Property is clear. Insufficient and qualified judges, lack of court days, lack of court staff, lack of court premises... 12 months delays? If you're lucky!

End of the day for me. I've taken all the profits I can, and as they say, if you can't beat them, join them. I've invested in a BTR REIT and am sitting in a 21% profit after just over a year... with no hassle!

David100

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13:44 PM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Time to bail out. I've sold one already, two more to go.
I have asked the tenants if they want to buy off me, and they said no they want to rent not own.
There is the problem, people assume everyone wants to own their home.
As the PRS shrinks, where will these renters go?

Herr Volvo

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14:37 PM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 27/06/2025 - 11:46
NewYorkie thats a good move, I'm selling and i think Reit investing is a good idea. 21pc is amazing, could you please let me know which company you hold assets with? That would be great. Thanks konrad

TheMaluka

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16:45 PM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

"I’ll be waiting keenly for the first alligator to be kept in a tiny flat. It will happen because the tenant ‘will have the right’ to do so!"

Many years ago, when I was an undergraduate, I knew a girl who kept very small Alligators in her bath, she was researching at London University, I know not what, but it involved feeding chicken heads to the creatures which they devoured whole, also fingers if you were not careful.

Mark W

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23:34 PM, 27th June 2025, About 2 weeks ago

Does anyone care about tenants anymore? I don't, that's how the government have made me. You need a guarantor and rgi or I'll see you live in a bin

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