Renters' Rights Act 2025 - A Tenant's Guide
The Renters' Rights Act 2025 strengthens your protections as a tenant. Here's what's changed and what it means for you.
Your New Rights
No More "No Fault" Evictions
Section 21 is abolished. Your landlord must have a valid reason to ask you to leave, and you'll get more notice time (usually 4 months).
1 Month Rent Advance Maximum
Landlords can only ask for up to 1 month's rent in advance AFTER you've signed the agreement. Before signing, they cannot request any advance payment.
No More Bidding Wars
Landlords must publish an asking rent and cannot accept offers above it. You should never be pressured to offer more than the advertised price.
Right to Request Pets
Blanket "no pets" bans are now illegal. Landlords can only refuse with a valid reason (like building restrictions or insurance requirements).
Fair Rent Increases
Rent increases limited to once per year maximum, with at least 2 months' notice. Must be fair and in line with market rates. You can challenge through the First-tier Tribunal, which cannot set the rent higher than your landlord proposed.
Protection from Eviction for Arrears
You cannot be evicted for rent arrears unless you're 3 months behind (increased from 2 months). The notice period for arrears has also been extended from 2 weeks to 4 weeks, giving you more time to catch up.
Equal Break Clauses
If your tenancy agreement has a break clause, it must apply equally to both you and your landlord. One-sided break clauses that only benefit the landlord are now unenforceable.
Protection from Discrimination
Landlords cannot discriminate against you for receiving benefits (Universal Credit, Housing Benefit), having children, or any protected characteristic. Both direct ("No DSS") and indirect discrimination are illegal.
Free Ombudsman Service
All private landlords must join a mandatory ombudsman scheme. You can resolve disputes about repairs, deposits, and service complaints for free, without going to court.
Enhanced Rent Repayment Rights
If your landlord commits certain offences (unprotected deposit, unlicensed property), you can claim back up to 24 months of rent (doubled from 12 months).
Written Tenancy Agreement
Landlords are now required to provide a written tenancy agreement along with a government information sheet. This ensures you have clear documentation of the terms of your tenancy.
Private Rented Sector Database
All landlords must register on a new PRS Database. This improves transparency and helps local councils identify and take action against rogue landlords.
The Renters' Rights Act received Royal Assent in October 2025. The government has confirmed a single-stage rollout for core provisions in 2026, with a specific date to be confirmed. Once in force, most protections will apply to both new and existing tenancies. Check gov.uk for the latest updates.
Fixed-Term Tenancies Ending
NEW Tenancies
Must be periodic (rolling monthly) from day one. No end date allowed. More flexible for you.
EXISTING Fixed-Terms
Will automatically convert to periodic when they end. Cannot be renewed as fixed-term. All your other rights stay the same.
Health & Safety Protections
-
Awaab's Law: Damp & Mould Protection
Named after Awaab Ishak, this law requires landlords to investigate and fix hazards like damp and mould within set timeframes. Your landlord must:
- Respond to reports of damp, mould, and other hazards promptly
- Investigate and carry out repairs within prescribed timeframes
- Offer alternative accommodation if the property is unsafe
- Not dismiss reports without proper investigation
Specific timeframes for the private rented sector are subject to consultation. Enforcement is through court breach of contract claims and the ombudsman service.
-
Decent Homes Standard
Your property must meet minimum quality standards including proper heating, insulation, and facilities. Your landlord must keep the property in good repair.
-
Safety Certificates
Landlords must provide you with valid certificates before you move in:
- Gas Safety Certificate (annual)
- Electrical Installation Condition Report (every 5 years)
- Energy Performance Certificate
These protect your safety and must be kept up to date.
-
Deposit Protection
Your deposit must be protected (maximum 5 weeks' rent, or 6 weeks if annual rent under £50,000) in a government-approved scheme within 30 days.
You must receive prescribed information including:
- Scheme name and contact details
- How to get your deposit back
- How to resolve disputes
What To Do If...
-
Your landlord asks for more than 1 month rent in advance
- Politely remind them of the RRA 2025 limit
- Refuse to pay more than 1 month
- If they insist: Contact your local council or Citizens Advice
- Keep all evidence (messages, emails)
-
Your pet request is denied without good reason
- Request written explanation
- Valid reasons include: building rules, insurance restrictions, property size
- Invalid reasons include: blanket "no pets" policy, personal preference
- If unreasonable: Contact Shelter or Citizens Advice
-
You notice damp or mould in your home
- Report it immediately IN WRITING (email or letter)
- Take photos with dates
- Keep diary of any health symptoms
- Your landlord must respond and fix within prescribed timeframes
- If you have children or health conditions, mention this - it's priority
- No response? Contact environmental health at your local council
-
You receive an excessive rent increase notice
- Compare to similar properties in your area
- Check it's been at least 12 months since last increase
- Challenge through First-tier Tribunal if unfair or above market rate
- Get advice from Shelter or Citizens Advice first
-
You're facing discrimination
Evidence of discrimination includes:
- Adverts saying "No DSS" or "No children"
- Being rejected without proper affordability assessment
- Different treatment compared to other applicants
What to do:
- Keep all evidence (emails, messages, adverts)
- Contact Shelter, Citizens Advice, or your local council
- Report to landlord's ombudsman scheme
- Landlords face £7,000 civil penalty (first breach); up to £40,000 or criminal prosecution for repeat offences
-
Your deposit isn't protected
- Your landlord must protect it within 30 days
- You must receive prescribed information
- If not protected: You can claim compensation (1-3x deposit amount)
- Landlord cannot evict you until deposit is protected
- Contact your local council or Citizens Advice
Need Help or Advice?
Find your local bureau for free advice
For: Environmental health, licensing, enforcement
• The Property Ombudsman (TPO): tpos.co.uk
• Property Redress Scheme (PRS): theprs.co.uk
• DPS: 0330 303 0030 / depositprotection.com
• TDS: 0300 037 1000 / tenancydepositscheme.com
For: Challenging rent increases, property condition disputes
Implementation Timeline
- 27 December 2025: Enhanced local authority enforcement powers (now in effect)
- 2026 (date to be confirmed): Core protections — Section 21 abolition, periodic tenancies, Awaab's Law, ombudsman service, anti-discrimination rules, pet request rights, rent bidding ban, written tenancy agreements, rent advance limits
- Following core rollout: PRS Database registration for all landlords
- 2030: Energy efficiency standards compliance deadline
Once the core provisions come into force, most protections will apply to both new and existing tenancies. Check gov.uk for the latest implementation dates.
💡 Know Your Rights
This guide covers your main protections under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. If you're ever unsure about your rights, don't hesitate to seek free advice from Shelter, Citizens Advice, or your local council.
Remember: These are legal rights - your landlord must follow them. If they don't, there are penalties and you have options to enforce your rights.
📋 Disclaimer
This guide provides general information about tenant rights under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. It is not legal advice. For specific advice about your situation, please contact Shelter, Citizens Advice, or a qualified legal advisor. Laws and regulations may be updated - always check for the latest information.
Last updated: 29 March 2026