Renting in the UK 2026 — Tenant Rights, Deposits, Costs and Rent vs BuyRenters' Rights Bill Explained — What Changes for Tenants and Landlords
How the Renters' Rights Bill changes renting in England, including the end of Section 21 no-fault evictions, new tenant protections, the property portal, and what landlords must do differently.
If you are comparing tenant rights, deposit protection, and rent-versus-buy decisions, start with the Renting Hub for the full route map.
The Renters’ Rights Bill is the most significant change to renting in England in a generation. It affects every private tenant and landlord. Here’s what’s changing and what it means for you.
Key Changes
| Change | What it means |
|---|
| Section 21 abolished | Landlords can no longer evict without a valid reason |
| All tenancies become periodic | No more fixed-term tenancies — all tenancies roll monthly |
| Right to keep pets | Landlords can’t unreasonably refuse pets |
| Property portal | New digital register of landlords and properties |
| Private rented sector ombudsman | Free dispute resolution for tenants |
| Decent Homes Standard | Private rentals must meet quality standards |
| Rent increase limits | Once per year, via formal Section 13 notice only |
| Bidding wars banned | Landlords and agents cannot invite bids above asking rent |
Section 21 Abolition — End of No-Fault Evictions
What’s Changing
| Before | After |
|---|
| Landlord could serve Section 21 giving 2 months’ notice — no reason needed | Landlord must use Section 8 with a valid ground |
| Tenants could be evicted even if they’d done nothing wrong | Must be a genuine, provable reason |
| Used as retaliation against repair complaints | Retaliatory eviction explicitly prohibited |
Valid Grounds for Eviction Under the New Rules (Section 8)
| Ground | Notice period | Detail |
|---|
| Rent arrears (3+ months) | 4 weeks | Mandatory ground if arrears persist |
| Antisocial behaviour | 2 weeks (serious) | Can seek immediate possession for extreme cases |
| Landlord wants to sell | 4 months | New mandatory ground — can’t be used in first 12 months |
| Landlord/family needs to move in | 4 months | New mandatory ground — can’t be used in first 12 months |
| Property needed for redevelopment | 4 months | Substantial refurbishment that can’t be done with tenant in situ |
| Breach of tenancy terms | 2–4 weeks | Depending on severity |
Periodic Tenancies
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| All tenancies become periodic | No more 6-month or 12-month fixed terms |
| Tenant can leave with 2 months’ notice | At any time — no break clause needed |
| Landlord can only end tenancy with valid grounds | Via Section 8 (see above) |
| Existing fixed terms | Will transition to periodic when the Act fully applies |
| Benefits for tenants | More flexibility — not locked into long leases |
Right to Keep Pets
| Detail | Rule |
|---|
| Can I request a pet? | Yes — the landlord must consider it |
| Can the landlord refuse? | Only with a reasonable reason (must respond within 42 days) |
| What’s reasonable refusal? | Very small property, building rules, allergies of other tenants |
| Pet damage insurance | Landlord can require the tenant to have pet damage insurance |
| Existing bans in tenancy agreements | Blanket “no pets” clauses will no longer be enforceable |
Rent Increases
| Rule | Detail |
|---|
| How often? | Once per year maximum |
| How? | Must use a formal Section 13 notice |
| How much notice? | 2 months |
| Can I challenge it? | Yes — appeal to the First-tier Tribunal if it’s above market rate |
| Tribunal assessment | Will determine the open market rent |
| Rent review clauses | No longer allowed — only Section 13 route |
| Bidding wars | Landlords and agents cannot ask or encourage prospective tenants to offer above the advertised rent |
The Private Rented Sector Database (Property Portal)
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| What is it? | A digital register of all private landlords and their properties |
| Who must register? | All private landlords in England |
| What information? | Landlord identity, property details, compliance records |
| Tenant access | Tenants can check if their landlord is registered |
| Enforcement | Local authorities can take action against unregistered landlords |
| Purpose | Transparency, accountability, easier enforcement |
The Ombudsman
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| What is it? | A new independent ombudsman for private rented disputes |
| Cost to tenants | Free |
| Landlords must join | Yes — membership will be mandatory |
| What it covers | Complaints about repairs, deposits, landlord behaviour, rent disputes |
| Binding decisions | Yes — decisions are binding on landlords |
| Compensation | The ombudsman can order compensation |
Decent Homes Standard
For the first time, private rented homes must meet the Decent Homes Standard (previously only social housing):
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|
| Free from serious hazards | Property must pass HHSRS assessment |
| Reasonable state of repair | Structure, exterior, and services maintained |
| Reasonably modern facilities | Kitchen, bathroom, heating — adequate for modern living |
| Thermal comfort | Adequate insulation and heating |
What This Means for Tenants
| Benefit | Detail |
|---|
| Greater security | Can’t be evicted without reason |
| Flexibility | Can leave with 2 months’ notice |
| Pets allowed | Reasonable requests can’t be refused |
| Fair rents | Increases capped at once per year, challengeable at tribunal |
| Quality standards | Property must meet Decent Homes Standard |
| Complaints | Free ombudsman service |
| Transparency | Property portal checks |
What This Means for Landlords
| Change | Action required |
|---|
| No more Section 21 | Must use Section 8 with valid grounds |
| Register on property portal | Mandatory |
| Join the ombudsman | Mandatory |
| Decent Homes Standard | Ensure property meets requirements |
| Pet requests | Must consider reasonably |
| Rent increases | Once per year, Section 13 only |
Timeline and Implementation
The Bill is being implemented in stages. Key dates are subject to change — check GOV.UK for the latest.
| Phase | Expected provisions |
|---|
| Phase 1 | Property portal, ombudsman, initial provisions |
| Phase 2 | Section 21 abolished for new tenancies |
| Phase 3 | Section 21 abolished for existing tenancies |
| Phase 4 | Full Decent Homes Standard enforcement |
Summary
| Change | Impact |
|---|
| Section 21 gone | No more no-fault evictions |
| Periodic tenancies | More flexibility for tenants |
| Pets | Reasonable requests must be considered |
| Rent | Max one increase per year, challengeable |
| Ombudsman | Free dispute resolution |
| Property portal | Landlord register |
| Decent Homes Standard | Quality requirements for rentals |
aliases:
- /mortgages/renting/renters-rights-bill-explained/
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