Renting in the UK 2026 — Tenant Rights, Deposits, Costs and Rent vs Buy

Damp and Mould in Rented Property — Your Rights as a Tenant UK

Your rights if you have damp and mould in a rented property, what your landlord must do, how to report it, and what to do if they refuse to act.

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Damp and mould in rented homes is a serious health hazard and one of the most common complaints tenants face. Following Awaab’s Law and increased scrutiny of housing conditions, your rights are stronger than ever.

Your Rights as a Tenant

RightDetail
Safe and habitable homeYour landlord must provide a property free from serious hazards
Structural maintenanceLandlord responsible for roof, walls, windows, damp proofing
Adequate ventilationLandlord must ensure the property has adequate ventilation
Prompt repairsOnce reported, landlord must act within a reasonable time
Protection from retaliationCannot be evicted for reporting disrepair
Environmental healthYou can contact your local council if the landlord won’t act

Types of Damp

TypeCauseLandlord responsible?
Rising dampMoisture from the ground rising through walls — failed damp-proof courseYes
Penetrating dampWater coming through walls, roof, or windows — external defectsYes
Condensation dampMoisture from breathing, cooking, bathing hitting cold surfacesUsually yes — landlord must provide adequate heating and ventilation

When Is Condensation the Tenant’s Responsibility?

Landlord’s responsibilityTenant’s responsibility
Providing adequate ventilation (extractor fans, trickle vents)Using ventilation provided (opening windows, running fans)
Ensuring heating system worksNot blocking vents or air bricks
Adequate insulationNot generating excessive moisture without ventilating
Maintaining windows that openReporting issues promptly

Important: Landlords cannot simply blame tenants for “lifestyle” without ensuring the property has adequate ventilation and insulation. A property that develops condensation damp with normal use has a structural/design problem.

What to Do If You Have Damp and Mould

Step 1: Report to Your Landlord in Writing

HowDetail
Email or letterCreate a written record — don’t just call
Describe the problemLocation, severity, when you first noticed it
Include photosDated photos of the damp and mould
Request a timelineAsk when they will inspect and repair
Keep copiesSave all correspondence

Step 2: Give Your Landlord Time to Respond

UrgencyReasonable response time
Emergency (e.g., water pouring in)24 hours
Urgent (spreading mould, health risk)1–2 weeks for inspection, repairs ASAP after
Non-urgent damp4–6 weeks for full repair

Step 3: If They Don’t Act — Contact Environmental Health

What to doHow
Contact your local councilAsk for the environmental health or housing standards team
They will inspectUsing the Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS)
Category 1 hazardCouncil must take action — can issue an improvement notice or prohibition order
Category 2 hazardCouncil may take action
Landlord non-complianceCan face fines, prosecution, or a rent repayment order

Step 4: Further Action

OptionDetail
Housing ombudsman (social housing)Free complaint resolution
Private rented sector ombudsman (when available)For private tenancies under the Renters’ Rights Bill
County court claimSue landlord for repairs and compensation
Legal aidMay be available for serious disrepair cases
Shelter / Citizens AdviceFree advice and support

Awaab’s Law

Following the death of two-year-old Awaab Ishak from mould exposure in his social housing, Awaab’s Law was introduced:

RequirementDetail
Social landlords mustInvestigate hazards within 14 days of being told
Repairs startedWithin 7 days of investigation
Emergency repairsWithin 24 hours
Applies toSocial housing initially — may be extended to private rentals

Health Impacts of Damp and Mould

ConditionRisk
AsthmaMould spores trigger and worsen asthma
Respiratory infectionsIncreased risk, especially in children
Allergic reactionsSneezing, runny nose, skin rashes
Weakened immune systemLong-term exposure can affect immunity
Mental healthLiving in poor conditions impacts wellbeing

Who’s most vulnerable: children, elderly people, those with existing respiratory conditions, and immunocompromised individuals.

What Your Landlord Should Do

ActionDetail
Inspect the propertyIdentify the type and source of damp
Fix the root causeRepair leaks, improve ventilation, install damp-proof course
Remove existing mouldProfessional mould removal if extensive
Improve ventilationInstall or repair extractor fans, trickle vents
Improve insulationEspecially cold bridging around windows
Provide adequate heatingA working, affordable heating system
MonitorCheck the issue hasn’t returned

What You Can Do in the Meantime

ActionDetail
Clean mould safelyUse mould remover spray or diluted bleach — wear gloves and a mask
VentilateOpen windows when cooking, bathing, or drying clothes
Use extractor fansAlways use them in kitchen and bathroom
Avoid drying clothes on radiatorsUse a clothes airer near an open window or a tumble dryer
Move furniture away from wallsAllow air to circulate behind wardrobes and sofas
Use a dehumidifierHelps reduce moisture — but the landlord should address the root cause

Note: These measures help manage symptoms but do not fix the underlying problem. Your landlord must address the root cause.

Compensation

What you may claimDetail
Rent reductionFor the period the property was uninhabitable or substandard
Damage to belongingsReplacement cost for clothing, furniture damaged by mould
Health impactsMedical evidence of illness caused by damp conditions
InconvenienceFor disruption and poor living conditions

Typical compensation ranges from a few hundred pounds to several thousand, depending on severity and duration.

Summary

Key pointDetail
Landlord’s responsibilityStructure, ventilation, heating, insulation
Report in writingAlways — with photos and dates
Environmental healthContact your council if landlord won’t act
Don’t withhold rentIt can harm your position
Health riskReal and recognised — especially for children
Awaab’s LawStrict timelines for social housing repairs
CompensationPossible for damage, health impacts, and inconvenience

aliases:

  • /mortgages/renting/damp-mould-tenants-rights/

Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.

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Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Renting
  2. Shelter — Renting