Renting in the UK 2026 — Tenant Rights, Deposits, Costs and Rent vs BuySection 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?
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| What it does | Allows a landlord to end an assured shorthold tenancy without giving a reason |
| Notice period | At least 2 months |
| Can be used when | After any fixed term ends, or during a periodic tenancy |
| Applies in | England only (Scotland and Wales have different systems) |
| Being abolished | Yes — under the Renters’ Rights Bill |
When Can a Section 21 Be Served?
| Situation | Can Section 21 be served? |
|---|
| During first 4 months of tenancy | No — 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 council | Restricted — see retaliatory eviction below |
| Deposit not protected | Invalid |
What to Do When You Receive a Section 21 Notice
Step 1: Check If It’s Valid
| Requirement | Is 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
| Organisation | How they can help |
|---|
| Shelter | Free housing advice — 0808 800 4444 |
| Citizens Advice | Legal guidance and support |
| Local council housing team | Homelessness prevention duty |
| A solicitor | If you want to challenge the notice |
Step 3: Understand the Timeline
| Stage | Timeframe |
|---|
| Section 21 notice served | Day 0 |
| Earliest you must leave | 2 months later |
| If you don’t leave | Landlord applies to court for possession order |
| Court hearing | 4–8 weeks after application |
| If court grants possession | You get 14 days (can request up to 42 days in cases of hardship) |
| Bailiff eviction (if needed) | Several weeks after court order |
| Total realistic timeline | 4–6 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:
| Protection | Detail |
|---|
| Section 21 invalid | If served within 6 months of a council improvement notice or emergency remedial action |
| Cannot be punished for complaining | Serving Section 21 after a repair complaint can be challenged as retaliatory |
| Evidence helps | Keep all written complaints and council correspondence |
When Section 21 Becomes Invalid
| Reason for invalidity | Detail |
|---|
| Deposit not protected within 30 days | All three deposit schemes require timely protection |
| Prescribed information not provided | Written details about the deposit scheme |
| No gas safety certificate | Current certificate must have been given |
| No EPC | A valid EPC must have been provided |
| No ‘How to rent’ guide | The current government guide must have been supplied |
| Served too early | Cannot be served in the first 4 months |
| Wrong form used | Must use Form 6A (in England) |
| Licensing breach | If the property requires an HMO or selective licence the landlord doesn’t have |
Section 21 vs Section 8
| Feature | Section 21 | Section 8 |
|---|
| Reason needed | No | Yes — must cite specific grounds |
| Notice period | 2 months | Varies (2 weeks to 4 months depending on ground) |
| Court needed | Yes (if tenant doesn’t leave) | Yes |
| Mandatory grounds | Automatic possession if valid | Court must grant possession |
| Discretionary grounds | N/A | Court decides based on circumstances |
| Being abolished | Yes | No — this becomes the only route |
After Section 21 Abolition
Once the Renters’ Rights Bill is fully in force:
| Change | Detail |
|---|
| No more Section 21 | Cannot be used for any tenancy |
| Section 8 only | Landlords must prove a valid ground |
| New grounds added | Landlord selling, landlord/family moving in |
| Stronger tenant position | Can only be evicted with reason |
| Apply to existing tenancies | After transition period |
Homelessness and the Council’s Duty
If you receive a valid Section 21 and may become homeless:
| Step | When |
|---|
| Contact your local council | As soon as you receive the notice |
| Prevention duty | Council must help you find alternative housing 56 days before potential homelessness |
| Relief duty | If you become homeless, council must help you secure accommodation |
| Priority need | Families with children, pregnant women, vulnerable people get priority |
| Intentional homelessness | Doesn’t apply to Section 21 — you’re not choosing to be homeless |
Summary
| Key point | Detail |
|---|
| Section 21 | No-fault eviction — 2 months’ notice |
| Being abolished | Yes — Renters’ Rights Bill |
| Check validity | Deposit, gas cert, EPC, ‘How to rent’ guide |
| Don’t panic | You have at least 2 months, and the court process takes longer |
| Get advice | Shelter, Citizens Advice, local council |
| Retaliation protection | Cannot evict you for complaining about conditions |
| Council duty | Must help prevent homelessness |
aliases:
- /mortgages/renting/section-21-no-fault-eviction-guide/
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