Renters (Reform)
Bill
“Renters will benefit from
stronger security of tenure
and better value, while
landlords will benefit from
reforms to provide certainty
that they can regain
their properties when
needed.”
- A thriving private rented sector is a vital part of our
housing market – providing flexibility for those who want it, and
a secure stepping stone towards home ownership for aspiring
renters.
- The Renters (Reform) Bill delivers our manifesto commitment
to upgrade the private rented sector and improve renting for the
long-term. It will provide greater security and certainty of
quality accommodation for renters, while helping landlords get
their property back swiftly when needed, such as evicting
anti-social tenants or those repeatedly in rent arrears.
What does the
Bill do?
- As part of the Government’s long-term plan for housing, the
Renters (Reform) Bill will support the 11 million private tenants
and 2.3 million landlords in England by:
-
Delivering the
Government’s manifesto
commitment to
abolish ‘no fault
evictions’, increasing tenants’ security. We will
not commence the abolition of section 21 until stronger
possession grounds and a new court process is in place.
-
Strengthening landlord grounds for
possession, adding new mandatory grounds for
possession; for example, if landlords wish to sell property
or for repeated serious rent arrears, as well as expanding
grounds for when close family members wish to move in. If a
tenant breaches their tenancy agreement or damages the
property, landlords will be able to evict them in as little
as two weeks.
-
Introducing stronger
powers to
evict anti-social
tenants. Tenants who are persistently
disruptive should be evicted – a measure that will be
welcomed by both landlords and responsible tenants. The Bill
will seek to halve the delay between a landlord serving
notice for anti-social behaviour and eviction, with landlords
able to make a claim in the court immediately. We will also
broaden the criteria for disruptive and harmful activities
that can lead to eviction.
-
Ending blanket bans on pets. Tenants will
have the right to request a pet, which landlords cannot
unreasonably refuse. We will do this whilst protecting
landlords’ properties by allowing them to require insurance
to cover potential damage from pets.
-
Creating a digital Private Rented Property
Portal to bring together key information
for landlords,
tenants, and
councils. Landlords will quickly be
able to understand their obligations and demonstrate
compliance. Councils will be able to use the Portal to
target enforcement where it is needed against a
minority of unscrupulous landlords. Tenants will be
able to access helpful information when entering
tenancies.
-
Supporting quicker, cheaper resolution when
there are disputes - preventing them escalating to
costly court proceedings – with a new Private
Rented Sector Ombudsman that will provide fair,
impartial and binding resolution, reducing the need to
go to court.
- Alongside this, we intend to bring forward amendments
at the earliest opportunity to:
-
-
Make it illegal to have blanket bans on
renting to tenants in receipt of benefits or with
children – so no family is discriminated
against, while landlords will retain the final say on
who they rent to.
-
Squeeze out
criminal landlords
who undercut
the responsible
majority – making it easier for
councils to target enforcement action and arming them
with further enforcement powers.
-
Protect the
student market. We
recognise that the student market is largely cyclical
and that landlords must be able to guarantee possession
each year for a new set of tenants. We will introduce a
new ground for possession to facilitate this.
- Alongside the Bill the Government is pursuing wider
measures to support landlords:
-
-
Speeding up the courts process so landlords
can quickly regain possession
of their
property if
a tenant
refuses to
move out. We will
align the abolition of section 21 with reform of the
courts. We are starting work on this now, with an
initial commitment of £1.2 million to begin designing
a new digital system for possessions. As work
progresses, we will engage landlords and tenants to
ensure the new system supports an efficient and
straightforward possession system for all parties.
-
Scrapping proposals to require landlords to
meet EPC C from 2025 in their private rented
properties. As announced by the Prime Minister
in September, we will not be taking forward proposals
to force private landlords or homeowners to upgrade
homes to EPC C. Landlords can still take
advantage of the many government-backed schemes available
to improve energy efficiency but at a time that suits them.
Territorial extent
and application
- The Bill will extend to England and Wales and apply to
England.
Key facts
- We have taken significant action over the past decade
to improve private renting. This has included improving
safety standards through requirements for smoke and carbon
monoxide detectors, awarding £6.7 million to local councils
to boost their enforcement work where things go wrong, and
reducing financial barriers to rented by capping most
tenancy deposits at five weeks’ rent.
- We have also legislated to ban tenant fees. This has
reduced the upfront cost for tenants of renting and
provided greater transparency over what a given property
will cost them in the advertised rent with no hidden costs.
- During the COVID-19 pandemic the Government’s emergency
measures helped tenants to remain in their homes by banning
bailiff evictions, extending notice periods, and providing
unprecedented financial aid.
- We are on track to meet our manifesto commitment of one
million additional homes over this Parliament and have
delivered almost 2.3 million homes across England since
2010, giving millions of people the opportunity of
homeownership while boosting the supply of homes for rent.
- Unexpected evictions cause financial difficulty and
disrupt employment and schooling and over a quarter of
households that moved in the last year did not do so by
choice. Each school move at a non-standard time reduces
expected GCSE grades by 0.5.
- Most landlords and properties let are sensitive to
shifts in interest rates – almost 60 per cent of landlords
(and almost 70 per cent of properties let) are financed
through a Buy to Let mortgage. We must protect their rights
to increase rents to the market level.
- Most landlords hold a small portfolio – having worked
hard to secure this property – over 40 per cent rent out
just one property, while a further 40 per cent own between
two and five, and the remaining 18 per cent own five or
more. We must ensure the new systems works for all.