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

Section 21 No-Fault Eviction Guide — Your Rights as a Tenant

What a Section 21 eviction notice is, your rights when you receive one, the abolition of no-fault evictions, and what to do if your landlord serves one.

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Section 21 is the mechanism landlords in England use for no-fault evictions — ending a tenancy without needing a reason. It’s being abolished under the Renters’ Rights Bill, but until that takes full effect, it’s important to know your rights.

What Is Section 21?

FeatureDetail
What it doesAllows a landlord to end an assured shorthold tenancy without giving a reason
Notice periodAt least 2 months
Can be used whenAfter any fixed term ends, or during a periodic tenancy
Applies inEngland only (Scotland and Wales have different systems)
Being abolishedYes — under the Renters’ Rights Bill

When Can a Section 21 Be Served?

SituationCan Section 21 be served?
During first 4 months of tenancyNo — cannot be served during the first 4 months
During fixed term (with break clause)Usually — but check the break clause terms
After fixed term expires (rolling/periodic)Yes
After tenant complaint to councilRestricted — see retaliatory eviction below
Deposit not protectedInvalid

What to Do When You Receive a Section 21 Notice

Step 1: Check If It’s Valid

RequirementIs it met?
Correct form (Form 6A) used?Must use the prescribed form
At least 2 months’ notice?From the date you receive it
Valid expiry date?Must expire on the last day of a period of the tenancy (for periodic tenancies)
Deposit protected?Must be in a government-approved scheme
Deposit information provided?Prescribed information must have been given to you
Gas safety certificate?Must have been given a valid certificate
EPC provided?Must have received the Energy Performance Certificate
‘How to rent’ guide?Must have received the current version
No improvement notice?Council must not have served an improvement notice in the last 6 months
Given after first 4 months?Cannot be served in the first 4 months

If any of these requirements are not met, the notice may be invalid.

Step 2: Get Advice

OrganisationHow they can help
ShelterFree housing advice — 0808 800 4444
Citizens AdviceLegal guidance and support
Local council housing teamHomelessness prevention duty
A solicitorIf you want to challenge the notice

Step 3: Understand the Timeline

StageTimeframe
Section 21 notice servedDay 0
Earliest you must leave2 months later
If you don’t leaveLandlord applies to court for possession order
Court hearing4–8 weeks after application
If court grants possessionYou get 14 days (can request up to 42 days in cases of hardship)
Bailiff eviction (if needed)Several weeks after court order
Total realistic timeline4–6 months from notice to actual eviction

Retaliatory Eviction Protection

If you’ve complained about the condition of the property and the council has served an improvement notice:

ProtectionDetail
Section 21 invalidIf served within 6 months of a council improvement notice or emergency remedial action
Cannot be punished for complainingServing Section 21 after a repair complaint can be challenged as retaliatory
Evidence helpsKeep all written complaints and council correspondence

When Section 21 Becomes Invalid

Reason for invalidityDetail
Deposit not protected within 30 daysAll three deposit schemes require timely protection
Prescribed information not providedWritten details about the deposit scheme
No gas safety certificateCurrent certificate must have been given
No EPCA valid EPC must have been provided
No ‘How to rent’ guideThe current government guide must have been supplied
Served too earlyCannot be served in the first 4 months
Wrong form usedMust use Form 6A (in England)
Licensing breachIf the property requires an HMO or selective licence the landlord doesn’t have

Section 21 vs Section 8

FeatureSection 21Section 8
Reason neededNoYes — must cite specific grounds
Notice period2 monthsVaries (2 weeks to 4 months depending on ground)
Court neededYes (if tenant doesn’t leave)Yes
Mandatory groundsAutomatic possession if validCourt must grant possession
Discretionary groundsN/ACourt decides based on circumstances
Being abolishedYesNo — this becomes the only route

After Section 21 Abolition

Once the Renters’ Rights Bill is fully in force:

ChangeDetail
No more Section 21Cannot be used for any tenancy
Section 8 onlyLandlords must prove a valid ground
New grounds addedLandlord selling, landlord/family moving in
Stronger tenant positionCan only be evicted with reason
Apply to existing tenanciesAfter transition period

Homelessness and the Council’s Duty

If you receive a valid Section 21 and may become homeless:

StepWhen
Contact your local councilAs soon as you receive the notice
Prevention dutyCouncil must help you find alternative housing 56 days before potential homelessness
Relief dutyIf you become homeless, council must help you secure accommodation
Priority needFamilies with children, pregnant women, vulnerable people get priority
Intentional homelessnessDoesn’t apply to Section 21 — you’re not choosing to be homeless

Summary

Key pointDetail
Section 21No-fault eviction — 2 months’ notice
Being abolishedYes — Renters’ Rights Bill
Check validityDeposit, gas cert, EPC, ‘How to rent’ guide
Don’t panicYou have at least 2 months, and the court process takes longer
Get adviceShelter, Citizens Advice, local council
Retaliation protectionCannot evict you for complaining about conditions
Council dutyMust help prevent homelessness

aliases:

  • /mortgages/renting/section-21-no-fault-eviction-guide/

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