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

Renters' 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.

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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

ChangeWhat it means
Section 21 abolishedLandlords can no longer evict without a valid reason
All tenancies become periodicNo more fixed-term tenancies — all tenancies roll monthly
Right to keep petsLandlords can’t unreasonably refuse pets
Property portalNew digital register of landlords and properties
Private rented sector ombudsmanFree dispute resolution for tenants
Decent Homes StandardPrivate rentals must meet quality standards
Rent increase limitsOnce per year, via formal Section 13 notice only
Bidding wars bannedLandlords and agents cannot invite bids above asking rent

Section 21 Abolition — End of No-Fault Evictions

What’s Changing

BeforeAfter
Landlord could serve Section 21 giving 2 months’ notice — no reason neededLandlord must use Section 8 with a valid ground
Tenants could be evicted even if they’d done nothing wrongMust be a genuine, provable reason
Used as retaliation against repair complaintsRetaliatory eviction explicitly prohibited

Valid Grounds for Eviction Under the New Rules (Section 8)

GroundNotice periodDetail
Rent arrears (3+ months)4 weeksMandatory ground if arrears persist
Antisocial behaviour2 weeks (serious)Can seek immediate possession for extreme cases
Landlord wants to sell4 monthsNew mandatory ground — can’t be used in first 12 months
Landlord/family needs to move in4 monthsNew mandatory ground — can’t be used in first 12 months
Property needed for redevelopment4 monthsSubstantial refurbishment that can’t be done with tenant in situ
Breach of tenancy terms2–4 weeksDepending on severity

Periodic Tenancies

FeatureDetail
All tenancies become periodicNo more 6-month or 12-month fixed terms
Tenant can leave with 2 months’ noticeAt any time — no break clause needed
Landlord can only end tenancy with valid groundsVia Section 8 (see above)
Existing fixed termsWill transition to periodic when the Act fully applies
Benefits for tenantsMore flexibility — not locked into long leases

Right to Keep Pets

DetailRule
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 insuranceLandlord can require the tenant to have pet damage insurance
Existing bans in tenancy agreementsBlanket “no pets” clauses will no longer be enforceable

Rent Increases

RuleDetail
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 assessmentWill determine the open market rent
Rent review clausesNo longer allowed — only Section 13 route
Bidding warsLandlords and agents cannot ask or encourage prospective tenants to offer above the advertised rent

The Private Rented Sector Database (Property Portal)

FeatureDetail
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 accessTenants can check if their landlord is registered
EnforcementLocal authorities can take action against unregistered landlords
PurposeTransparency, accountability, easier enforcement

The Ombudsman

FeatureDetail
What is it?A new independent ombudsman for private rented disputes
Cost to tenantsFree
Landlords must joinYes — membership will be mandatory
What it coversComplaints about repairs, deposits, landlord behaviour, rent disputes
Binding decisionsYes — decisions are binding on landlords
CompensationThe ombudsman can order compensation

Decent Homes Standard

For the first time, private rented homes must meet the Decent Homes Standard (previously only social housing):

RequirementDetail
Free from serious hazardsProperty must pass HHSRS assessment
Reasonable state of repairStructure, exterior, and services maintained
Reasonably modern facilitiesKitchen, bathroom, heating — adequate for modern living
Thermal comfortAdequate insulation and heating

What This Means for Tenants

BenefitDetail
Greater securityCan’t be evicted without reason
FlexibilityCan leave with 2 months’ notice
Pets allowedReasonable requests can’t be refused
Fair rentsIncreases capped at once per year, challengeable at tribunal
Quality standardsProperty must meet Decent Homes Standard
ComplaintsFree ombudsman service
TransparencyProperty portal checks

What This Means for Landlords

ChangeAction required
No more Section 21Must use Section 8 with valid grounds
Register on property portalMandatory
Join the ombudsmanMandatory
Decent Homes StandardEnsure property meets requirements
Pet requestsMust consider reasonably
Rent increasesOnce 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.

PhaseExpected provisions
Phase 1Property portal, ombudsman, initial provisions
Phase 2Section 21 abolished for new tenancies
Phase 3Section 21 abolished for existing tenancies
Phase 4Full Decent Homes Standard enforcement

Summary

ChangeImpact
Section 21 goneNo more no-fault evictions
Periodic tenanciesMore flexibility for tenants
PetsReasonable requests must be considered
RentMax one increase per year, challengeable
OmbudsmanFree dispute resolution
Property portalLandlord register
Decent Homes StandardQuality requirements for rentals

aliases:

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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.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Renting out a property
  2. GOV.UK — Landlord responsibilities
  3. GOV.UK — Renting
  4. Shelter — Renting