Renting in the UK 2026 — Tenant Rights, Deposits, Costs and Rent vs BuyDamp 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.
If you are comparing tenant rights, deposit protection, and rent-versus-buy decisions, start with the Renting Hub for the full route map.
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
| Right | Detail |
|---|
| Safe and habitable home | Your landlord must provide a property free from serious hazards |
| Structural maintenance | Landlord responsible for roof, walls, windows, damp proofing |
| Adequate ventilation | Landlord must ensure the property has adequate ventilation |
| Prompt repairs | Once reported, landlord must act within a reasonable time |
| Protection from retaliation | Cannot be evicted for reporting disrepair |
| Environmental health | You can contact your local council if the landlord won’t act |
Types of Damp
| Type | Cause | Landlord responsible? |
|---|
| Rising damp | Moisture from the ground rising through walls — failed damp-proof course | Yes |
| Penetrating damp | Water coming through walls, roof, or windows — external defects | Yes |
| Condensation damp | Moisture from breathing, cooking, bathing hitting cold surfaces | Usually yes — landlord must provide adequate heating and ventilation |
When Is Condensation the Tenant’s Responsibility?
| Landlord’s responsibility | Tenant’s responsibility |
|---|
| Providing adequate ventilation (extractor fans, trickle vents) | Using ventilation provided (opening windows, running fans) |
| Ensuring heating system works | Not blocking vents or air bricks |
| Adequate insulation | Not generating excessive moisture without ventilating |
| Maintaining windows that open | Reporting 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
| How | Detail |
|---|
| Email or letter | Create a written record — don’t just call |
| Describe the problem | Location, severity, when you first noticed it |
| Include photos | Dated photos of the damp and mould |
| Request a timeline | Ask when they will inspect and repair |
| Keep copies | Save all correspondence |
Step 2: Give Your Landlord Time to Respond
| Urgency | Reasonable 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 damp | 4–6 weeks for full repair |
| What to do | How |
|---|
| Contact your local council | Ask for the environmental health or housing standards team |
| They will inspect | Using the Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS) |
| Category 1 hazard | Council must take action — can issue an improvement notice or prohibition order |
| Category 2 hazard | Council may take action |
| Landlord non-compliance | Can face fines, prosecution, or a rent repayment order |
Step 4: Further Action
| Option | Detail |
|---|
| Housing ombudsman (social housing) | Free complaint resolution |
| Private rented sector ombudsman (when available) | For private tenancies under the Renters’ Rights Bill |
| County court claim | Sue landlord for repairs and compensation |
| Legal aid | May be available for serious disrepair cases |
| Shelter / Citizens Advice | Free 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:
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|
| Social landlords must | Investigate hazards within 14 days of being told |
| Repairs started | Within 7 days of investigation |
| Emergency repairs | Within 24 hours |
| Applies to | Social housing initially — may be extended to private rentals |
Health Impacts of Damp and Mould
| Condition | Risk |
|---|
| Asthma | Mould spores trigger and worsen asthma |
| Respiratory infections | Increased risk, especially in children |
| Allergic reactions | Sneezing, runny nose, skin rashes |
| Weakened immune system | Long-term exposure can affect immunity |
| Mental health | Living 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
| Action | Detail |
|---|
| Inspect the property | Identify the type and source of damp |
| Fix the root cause | Repair leaks, improve ventilation, install damp-proof course |
| Remove existing mould | Professional mould removal if extensive |
| Improve ventilation | Install or repair extractor fans, trickle vents |
| Improve insulation | Especially cold bridging around windows |
| Provide adequate heating | A working, affordable heating system |
| Monitor | Check the issue hasn’t returned |
What You Can Do in the Meantime
| Action | Detail |
|---|
| Clean mould safely | Use mould remover spray or diluted bleach — wear gloves and a mask |
| Ventilate | Open windows when cooking, bathing, or drying clothes |
| Use extractor fans | Always use them in kitchen and bathroom |
| Avoid drying clothes on radiators | Use a clothes airer near an open window or a tumble dryer |
| Move furniture away from walls | Allow air to circulate behind wardrobes and sofas |
| Use a dehumidifier | Helps 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 claim | Detail |
|---|
| Rent reduction | For the period the property was uninhabitable or substandard |
| Damage to belongings | Replacement cost for clothing, furniture damaged by mould |
| Health impacts | Medical evidence of illness caused by damp conditions |
| Inconvenience | For disruption and poor living conditions |
Typical compensation ranges from a few hundred pounds to several thousand, depending on severity and duration.
Summary
| Key point | Detail |
|---|
| Landlord’s responsibility | Structure, ventilation, heating, insulation |
| Report in writing | Always — with photos and dates |
| Environmental health | Contact your council if landlord won’t act |
| Don’t withhold rent | It can harm your position |
| Health risk | Real and recognised — especially for children |
| Awaab’s Law | Strict timelines for social housing repairs |
| Compensation | Possible 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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