Selective licensing was introduced as a tool to raise standards and tackle poor management in the private rented sector. In practice, many schemes have led to conditions that some landlords believe go far beyond what Parliament intended in the Housing Act 2004.
Wirral’s latest selective licensing scheme is a prime example – and it is now the subject of a live legal challenge.
This is not an attack on safety or compliance.
It is a targeted, line-by-line review of conditions that appear duplicative, disproportionate, or uncertain. If successful, the outcome could set a persuasive precedent for other councils and schemes across England.
Why landlords everywhere should care
If Wirral’s scheme is allowed to stand unchallenged, it risks becoming the template for other councils nationwide. Once a council establishes conditions beyond the statutory purpose, others often copy them – with little scrutiny.
The outcome in Wirral may well shape the licensing landscape for years to come.
What’s being challenged
The challenge (brought by a landlord client with support from JSC Chambers) focuses on conditions that:
Duplicate existing national duties – e.g. gas and electrical safety checks, smoke/CO alarms, EPC disclosure, “How to Rent” guide – all of which are already separately enforceable
Impose duties for tenant behaviour – e.g. pest infestations linked to refuse or pets, despite s.11(2) Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 excluding disrepair caused by tenant conduct
Shift public functions onto landlords – such as managing alleygate keys (public space management) or wheelie bins (the local waste authority’s responsibility)
Introduce vague obligations – open-ended “co-operation” duties or compulsory “training” without scope, creating uncertainty and uneven enforcement
Create risks of double sanctions – the same issue could be punished under national law and again as a licence breach (s.95 HA 2004).
This is not just a Wirral issue. It is about drawing the legal line in the sand.
The legal backbone (in plain English)
Housing Act 2004, Part 3 (Selective Licensing) – councils may impose additional licence conditions only where they are necessary, appropriate and reasonable to regulate the management, use or occupation of the property (s.90).
Schedule 4, HA 2004 – sets mandatory conditions (gas safety, electrical safety, smoke/CO alarms). Councils should not duplicate these through “additional” conditions.
DLUHC guidance – explicitly cautions that conditions must not duplicate other legal requirements and must be proportionate, evidenced and justified.
Selective Licensing of Houses (Specified Exemptions) (England) Order 2006 – exempts social housing. This leaves many landlords pointing to a two-tier system: private landlords face additional licensing duties while councils and registered providers do not.
Key case law landlords should know
Nottingham City Council v Parr [2018] UKSC 51 – Supreme Court confirmed licence conditions must be proportionate and aligned with statutory purpose. Over-prescriptive or mis-directed conditions can be struck out.
R (Gaskin) v Richmond upon Thames LBC [2018] EWHC 1996 (Admin) – High Court quashed an unlawful HMO licensing fee structure for breaching the EU Services Directive; fees must be proportionate and lawfully structured.
R (Hemming (t/a Simply Pleasure Ltd)) v Westminster City Council [2017] UKSC 50– licensing fees cannot become a revenue-raising tool; they must be proportionate and tied to actual licensing costs.
R (Peat) v Hyndburn BC [2011] EWHC 1739 (Admin) – licensing measures require adequate evidence; poor consultation or unsupported necessity can render them unlawful.
R (Khatun) v Newham LBC [2004] EWCA Civ 55 – where authorities must have regard to guidance, they must follow it or give cogent reasons for departing; proportionality and rationality are key.
In short:
Licence conditions must be tightly connected to the mischief they address – not duplicate national regimes or transfer unrelated duties onto landlords.
Where the first test will be made
A landlord client has served formal written objections to Wirral’s conditions and is now preparing to appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber).
The Tribunal has power to vary or quash conditions (Sch.5 para 31 HA 2004). Its decisions are published and often cited by other councils, tribunals, and landlord bodies as persuasive authority.
This makes the First-tier Tribunal the correct and low-risk forum to test proportionality and purpose before conditions bed in nationally.
Funding, risk and governance – full transparency
Work required – estimated 30 hours minimum, potentially up to 50.
Fee – JSC Chambers has agreed a fixed fee of £3,000 for the FTT stage (fixed even if hours exceed the estimate, avoiding open-ended hourly billing).
Raised so far – a small cohort of landlords has contributed £2,000. A further £1,000 will close the FTT funding gap.
How funds are handled – voluntary, non-refundable contributions applied solely to legal costs and disbursements for this test case. Receipts can be provided for business records. Surplus funds ring-fenced for follow-on steps.
Adverse costs – at the FTT, each side usually bears its own costs. Escalation to the Upper Tribunal or judicial review carries higher and less predictable cost risk; those steps will depend on outcome, merits and support.
This is the safest and most economical opportunity landlords have had to test the law.
Evidence that makes the difference
To show duplication, disproportionality and mis-targeting, the case is gathering:
Examples where councils enforced against landlords for tenant-caused disrepair (e.g. smashed glazing, refuse accumulation, pet infestations)
Comparisons with social housing — e.g. tenancy handbooks showing that RPs typically do not provide floor coverings, bins beyond the initial council issue, or alleygate keys
Council policies showing how licence breaches are used versus HHSRS (Part 1 HA 2004), and how double sanction is avoided (or not).
If you have anonymised examples, notices or costs, they can make a decisive difference at Tribunal.
Where membership bodies fit in
This is not about criticising landlord organisations. Bodies such as the NRLA do vital work in lobbying, training and policy.
Litigation, however, is a different lane. This case complements their role, and collaboration would strengthen the sector’s position.
Call to action
Contribute – £20, £50, £100–£200 pledges close the immediate funding gap
Provide evidence – share anonymised examples of enforcement where you were required to fix tenant-caused hazards or where PRS standards exceeded those for social landlords
Stay connected – share this article with other landlords and agents in licensing areas.
Bottom line
Selective licensing is not going away. But how it is applied is the battleground.
Section 90, Housing Act 2004 sets the limits
Case law confirms duplication, over-prescription and revenue-raising by the back door are not permissible.
This Wirral case is the right test, at the right time. If landlords step forward together, they can secure a fair and lawful framework.
If nothing is done, silence will be taken as permission for councils to carry on.
Legal arguments are set out very well, but this is not a Judicial Review that makes sense for landlord associations more widely to sponsor. It is merely an First-tier tribunal case. I don’t see how it provides any benefit more broadly to landlords around the country than can be taken from prior FTT cases that we can cite already:
CHI/00HB/HML/2021/0002
LON/00AD/HMR/2018/0001 CHI/00HN/HML/2019/0012-4
Member Since January 2011 -
Comments: 12193 - Articles: 1395
10:23 AM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
We live in a World that demands convenience.
The cost of the commission to a GoFundMe or similar campaign page would pale into insignificance in comparison to the amount of funds raised due to convenience. If it doesn’t attract donations you don’t pay.
The effort required to email you and discuss making a donation will put most people off. You might save the odd fiver in commissions for those who do that but lose thousands in lost donations.
I recently bought a property in one of Birkenhead’s selective licencing areas.
Dispite having only 3 years to go of the original scheme (5 years) I had to pay the full rate. So the Council have been paid the full rate twice for the same property!
I asked the council for a list of all landlords in their selective licencing areas…..it was huge….if each of these landlords paid £600 then the Council was collecting £100,000’s of thousand pounds.
Dispite having the property for 3 years, no one from the Council has asked to inspect my property…….it would be very interesting to see a breakdown of income and expenditure of this scheme and a list of how many properties they are actually inspecting per day.
Member Since January 2011 -
Comments: 12193 - Articles: 1395
2:43 PM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dave at 23/08/2025 – 11:22 Have you considered submitting a Freedom of Information Request (FoI) to request this information?
The level of competence of Council officers is a problem, as is their general lack of will to engage meaningfully with the PRS in a strategic and holistic approach to housing the people in their borough. They more often seem to see the PRS as a problem to be regulated as much as possible. This is a worry given the powers and duties that are being given to local authorities as part of the Renters Rights Act by a Government that seems to share that view.
Member Since September 2018 -
Comments: 3508 - Articles: 5
12:18 PM, 24th August 2025, About 8 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dave at 23/08/2025 – 11:22 Once you get the info Dave, then write to the Head of Housing (or whatever they call themselves ) and ask them to justify the full rate being charged AGAIN where there is a property sale and change of LL.
The property has not changed, the room sizes have not altered, the occupants are the same…
Remind them that when the rent goes up again the tenant will be paying this fee again, so ultimately they are paying twice. I suggest you make it clear this is overt tenant discrimination.
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Member Since February 2025 - Comments: 8
12:00 PM, 22nd August 2025, About 8 months ago
also
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/rental_landlord_data_data_protec#incoming-2425442
Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 198
1:54 PM, 22nd August 2025, About 8 months ago
Legal arguments are set out very well, but this is not a Judicial Review that makes sense for landlord associations more widely to sponsor. It is merely an First-tier tribunal case. I don’t see how it provides any benefit more broadly to landlords around the country than can be taken from prior FTT cases that we can cite already:
CHI/00HB/HML/2021/0002
LON/00AD/HMR/2018/0001 CHI/00HN/HML/2019/0012-4
Member Since January 2011 - Comments: 12193 - Articles: 1395
10:23 AM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
We live in a World that demands convenience.
The cost of the commission to a GoFundMe or similar campaign page would pale into insignificance in comparison to the amount of funds raised due to convenience. If it doesn’t attract donations you don’t pay.
The effort required to email you and discuss making a donation will put most people off. You might save the odd fiver in commissions for those who do that but lose thousands in lost donations.
Member Since February 2019 - Comments: 16
11:22 AM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
I recently bought a property in one of Birkenhead’s selective licencing areas.
Dispite having only 3 years to go of the original scheme (5 years) I had to pay the full rate. So the Council have been paid the full rate twice for the same property!
I asked the council for a list of all landlords in their selective licencing areas…..it was huge….if each of these landlords paid £600 then the Council was collecting £100,000’s of thousand pounds.
Dispite having the property for 3 years, no one from the Council has asked to inspect my property…….it would be very interesting to see a breakdown of income and expenditure of this scheme and a list of how many properties they are actually inspecting per day.
Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 198
11:49 AM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
For this type of thing, CrowdJustice would be more appropriate than GoFundMe.
Member Since January 2011 - Comments: 12193 - Articles: 1395
2:43 PM, 23rd August 2025, About 8 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dave at 23/08/2025 – 11:22
Have you considered submitting a Freedom of Information Request (FoI) to request this information?
See https://ico.org.uk/for-the-public/official-information/
Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 1137
10:19 AM, 24th August 2025, About 8 months ago
The level of competence of Council officers is a problem, as is their general lack of will to engage meaningfully with the PRS in a strategic and holistic approach to housing the people in their borough. They more often seem to see the PRS as a problem to be regulated as much as possible. This is a worry given the powers and duties that are being given to local authorities as part of the Renters Rights Act by a Government that seems to share that view.
Member Since September 2018 - Comments: 3508 - Articles: 5
12:18 PM, 24th August 2025, About 8 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dave at 23/08/2025 – 11:22
Once you get the info Dave, then write to the Head of Housing (or whatever they call themselves ) and ask them to justify the full rate being charged AGAIN where there is a property sale and change of LL.
The property has not changed, the room sizes have not altered, the occupants are the same…
Remind them that when the rent goes up again the tenant will be paying this fee again, so ultimately they are paying twice. I suggest you make it clear this is overt tenant discrimination.