Updated: March 2026 • Based on UK Law

England Only: This guide covers landlord obligations under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 for England only. Wales operates under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016. Scotland and Northern Ireland have separate housing legislation.
⏰ Deadline: 1 May 2026

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 is the biggest change to English tenancy law in over 30 years. Every private landlord in England is affected. Here’s what changes:

  • Section 21 abolished — no more “no-fault” evictions
  • All tenancies become periodic — fixed terms gone overnight
  • 37 possession grounds replace the current 17
  • Written Statement of Terms — mandatory for all new tenancies, fines up to £7,000
  • Tenants can request pets — landlords must respond formally within 28 days
  • Rent increases once per year only — contractual rent review clauses void
Quick Navigation:

What Is a Landlord Compliance Checklist?

A landlord compliance checklist is a chronological list of every obligation under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 that private landlords in England must complete before, on, and after 1 May 2026 — covering pre-tenancy checks, tenancy agreements, deposit protection, safety certificates, pet permissions, rent increase rules, and possession grounds.

This guide covers every landlord obligation under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 taking effect 1 May 2026, including tenancy changes, notice periods, and compliance deadlines.

The government just handed every private landlord in England a 37-ground possession system, 6 new mandatory obligations, fines starting at £7,000 and escalating to £40,000 — and gave you until 1 May 2026 to figure it all out. No grace period. No transition extension. Miss one deadline and the court blocks your ability to regain possession of your own property.

Rent review clauses you’ve relied on for years are void overnight. Pet requests you ignore for 42 days become automatic consent. If you’re staring at the Renters’ Rights Act wondering where to even start — you start here.

✓ Free Interactive Landlord Compliance Checklist

Every obligation in chronological order. Tick items off as you complete them — your progress saves automatically. Includes countdown timer, deadline warnings, penalty information, and direct links to every template and GOV.UK resource you need.

→ Open the Free Interactive Checklist

Key Takeaway: Need every template covered in this checklist? The Renters’ Rights Essential Pack bundles the key templates landlords need for May 2026 — £99. Or get everything in the Landlord Ultimate Bundle (all 31 templates). Individual templates from £10.

1. Before the Tenant Moves In

Complete these in order for every new tenancy from 1 May 2026. Miss one and you risk fines, voided notices, or failed possession claims down the line.

Right to Rent Check

Verify tenant identity documents and immigration status before the tenancy starts. Check original documents, make copies, and keep them for the duration of the tenancy plus 12 months. Penalties for non-compliance: up to £20,000 per tenant.

Right to Rent Check template | GOV.UK guidance

Tenant References & Guarantor

Employment, previous landlord, and credit references. Document tenant consent before processing personal data. If a guarantor is needed, the guarantor agreement must be signed before the tenancy starts.

Tenant Reference Form template | Guarantor Agreement template

Written Statement of Terms — NEW & MANDATORY

Warning — Fines up to £40,000: Every new tenancy from 1 May 2026 requires a Written Statement of Terms before the agreement is signed. It must include 20+ prescribed items covering rent, deposit, notice periods, repair obligations, pet rights, and equality duties. Penalty: £7,000 — rising to £40,000 if not remedied within 28 days.

The government has not published a standard template — the structure and wording is entirely on you. Read our full Written Statement of Terms guide.

Written Statement of Terms template

Tenancy Agreement — Updated for Periodic Terms

All new tenancies from May 2026 must be periodic — fixed-term ASTs are abolished. Your agreement must reflect the new structure: no fixed end date, correct notice periods, updated possession grounds.

Assured Periodic Tenancy template

Deposit Protection & Inventory

Deposit: Protect in a government-approved scheme within 30 days. Serve prescribed information separately — this is a distinct legal requirement. Courts cannot grant possession (except Grounds 7A/14) without deposit compliance.

Inventory: Detailed record of property condition and contents at check-in, signed by both parties. Without one, deposit deduction disputes almost always go in the tenant’s favour.

Deposit Protection Notice template | Inventory template

New Rules: Pet Permission, Rental Bidding, Discrimination

  • Pet requests: Tenants can request to keep a pet in writing. You must respond within 28 days — silence means consent. Use a Pet Permission Decision Notice to document your response. If approved, issue a Pet Addendum with conditions
  • Rental bidding banned: The advertised rent is the maximum. You cannot invite or accept higher offers
  • No advance rent: Maximum one month’s rent before the tenancy starts
  • Anti-discrimination: Blanket bans on tenants with children or receiving benefits are now illegal
Key Takeaway: Pre-tenancy is where most landlords will feel the biggest change. The Written Statement of Terms alone references six separate Acts of Parliament. Get it wrong and you’re facing fines before the tenant even moves in. Use our free interactive checklist to work through each item in order.

FREE Landlord Compliance Checklist

Every Obligation in Chronological Order — Deadlines, Penalties & Direct Links to GOV.UK Resources

Start Free Compliance Checklist
Interactive • Saves Progress • PDF Download • Always Free

2. Existing Tenancies — What You Must Do by 31 May 2026

Already have tenants? You have transition obligations too — and the deadlines are tight.

Obligation Deadline Penalty
Send Government Information Sheet to all existing tenants with written agreements — use an Information Sheet Receipt to prove delivery 31 May 2026 Up to £7,000
Written Statement of Terms for any tenants with oral agreements only 31 May 2026 Up to £7,000
Review existing ASTs — all convert to periodic automatically 1 May 2026 Unenforceable clauses
Serve any planned Section 21 notices (last chance) 30 April 2026 Permanently unavailable after
Warning: Section 21 notices served before 30 April 2026 must have court proceedings started by 31 July 2026. After that date, Section 21 is permanently dead — even for notices already served. If you’re planning to use Section 21, the clock is ticking.

Written Statement of Terms template | Read the full Renters’ Rights Act 2025 guide

Key Takeaway: Existing landlords aren’t exempt. The Information Sheet must reach every existing tenant by 31 May 2026. All ASTs convert to periodic automatically — no new paperwork needed for the conversion, but your agreement may now contain unenforceable clauses. Review now.

3. Health & Safety — Ongoing Obligations

These aren’t new for 2026, but they’re now directly linked to your ability to seek possession. Courts can refuse your claim if safety compliance isn’t in order.

  • Gas safety certificate — Annual inspection by Gas Safe registered engineer. Copy to tenant within 28 days → Gas Safety Log template
  • Electrical safety (EICR) — Every 5 years by a qualified person. Copy to tenant within 28 days → EPC Register template
  • Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) — Valid EPC before tenant moves in. Minimum rating E → EPC Register template
  • Smoke alarms — At least one on every storey. Test at start of each tenancy
  • Carbon monoxide alarms — Required in any room with a fixed combustion appliance
  • Awaab’s Law — Extension to private rented sector coming (timeline TBC). Landlords must address damp and mould within specified timeframes
Expert Insight: Safety compliance isn’t just about avoiding fines anymore. From May 2026, the court cannot grant a possession order (except for serious antisocial behaviour) unless the deposit is properly protected AND safety certificates are in order. One expired gas certificate can derail an entire possession claim.
Key Takeaway: Safety compliance is now a prerequisite for possession. Check every certificate expiry date now — gas (annual), EICR (5 years), EPC (10 years). One lapse can block your ability to regain your property.

4. During the Tenancy — Ongoing Management

The rules change from the moment 1 May 2026 hits — including how you increase rent, inspect the property, and handle pet requests.

Rent Increases — Section 13 Only, Once Per Year

Rent can only be increased using a Section 13 notice (Form 4A from May 2026). Maximum once every 12 months with at least two months’ notice. All existing contractual rent review clauses — including RPI/CPI increases — are void.

Tenants can challenge above-market increases at the First-tier Tribunal. The Tribunal cannot set rent higher than the landlord proposed — so tenants have nothing to lose by challenging.

Property Inspections & Maintenance

Give reasonable written notice before any inspection. Document findings with the Property Inspection Report template. Track repairs and contractor details in your Maintenance Log.

Pet Permissions

Respond to every pet request within 28 days using a Pet Permission Decision Notice. If approved, issue a Pet Addendum with conditions. Update the inventory before the pet arrives.

Key Takeaway: Rent review clauses are dead. Pet silence means consent. Inspections need proper notice. Every interaction needs documenting — because when Section 21 is gone, your paper trail IS your possession case. Keep everything in writing.

5. Breaches, Disputes & Correspondence

With Section 21 gone, your correspondence trail is your evidence trail. Verbal warnings carry no weight in court.

  • Late Rent Letter Pack — Graduated approach: first reminder, second reminder, formal demand. Courts expect evidence you tried to resolve arrears before seeking possession
  • Breach of Tenancy Letter — Formal notice of a tenancy breach with a reasonable deadline to remedy it. Essential for Section 8 Ground 12
  • Property Damage Letter — Document damage, require repair or compensation, preserve evidence for deposit deductions
  • Nuisance & ASB Warning — Formal warning for antisocial behaviour. Essential evidence for Section 8 Ground 14
Quick Answer: Every letter you don’t send is evidence you don’t have at the hearing. Judges look for a documented, reasonable, escalating response. Our Correspondence Pack includes all 7 letter templates for £35 — late rent, breach, damage, end of tenancy, written statement, break clause, and inspection notices.
Key Takeaway: No Section 21 fallback means every dispute needs a paper trail from day one. Late rent letters, breach notices, and ASB warnings aren’t optional anymore — they’re the foundation of any possession claim.

FREE Landlord Compliance Checklist

Every Obligation in Chronological Order — Deadlines, Penalties & Direct Links to GOV.UK Resources

Start Free Compliance Checklist
Interactive • Saves Progress • PDF Download • Always Free

6. Notices & Termination — The Only Route Now

From 1 May 2026, every possession claim goes through Section 8. There is no other route. Get the notice wrong and you start again — losing months.

Template What It Does When You Need It
Section 8 Particulars Builder Evidence statement for Form 3/3A Every possession claim
End of Tenancy Confirmation Move-out obligations, deposit return Every tenancy ending
Witness Statement CPR Part 32 format for court Contested hearings
Evidence Bundle Organised documents for court Any court hearing
Landlord Defence Statement Respond to tenant counterclaims Deposit disputes, counterclaims
Expert Insight: Section 8 now has 37 grounds (up from 17). New Ground 1A (sale) and expanded Ground 1 (family moving in) both require 4 months’ notice and cannot be used in the first 12 months. Ground 8 (serious rent arrears) now requires 3 months’ arrears with 4 weeks’ notice. Using the wrong ground or incorrect notice period means your claim is dismissed — and with no Section 21 fallback, you cannot afford to get this wrong.

Get the complete court toolkit: the Eviction Pack includes 6 templates for £30 — Section 8 builder, ASB warning, defence statement, evidence bundle, and witness statement.

Key Takeaway: Section 8 is now the only game in town. 37 grounds, longer notice periods, higher thresholds. Read our Section 8 Notice guide and Section 8 Particulars guide for complete details.

7. Registration & Future Compliance — Prepare Now

Phase 2 and 3 of the Renters’ Rights Act bring more obligations. Start preparing now.

  • PRS Database registration (late 2026) — Mandatory registration of all landlords and properties. Courts cannot grant possession without it (except Grounds 7A/14). Penalties: £7,000 to £40,000. Start assembling compliance documents now
  • PRS Ombudsman (expected 2028) — Mandatory membership for all private landlords. Legally binding dispute resolution without court. Maintain clear records of all tenant interactions, complaints, and resolutions
  • Digital record-keeping — Digitise all compliance documents: tenancy agreements, certificates, deposit info, inspection reports, correspondence. You’ll need these for Database registration and Ombudsman disputes
Key Takeaway: The PRS Database is the big one — no registration means no possession orders. It’s not live yet, but start organising your documents now. When it launches, landlords with organised records will register in minutes. Those without will be scrambling.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the Renters’ Rights Act take effect?

Phase 1: 1 May 2026. Section 21 abolished, all tenancies become periodic, new possession grounds, Written Statement mandatory, pet request rights, rent increase rules, bidding ban, discrimination protections. Phase 2 (late 2026): PRS Database. Phase 3 (2028+): Ombudsman, Decent Homes Standard.

Do I need to issue a new tenancy agreement for existing tenants?

No. Existing ASTs convert to periodic automatically on 1 May 2026. No new paperwork is needed for the conversion. However, you must send the Government Information Sheet to all existing tenants by 31 May 2026, and you should review your agreement for clauses that become unenforceable.

What is the Written Statement of Terms?

A mandatory document covering 20+ prescribed items that must be provided before any new tenancy agreement is signed from 1 May 2026. It can be included in the tenancy agreement or provided separately. Penalty for non-compliance: up to £7,000, rising to £40,000 if not remedied within 28 days.

Written Statement of Terms template | Full guide

Can I still evict tenants?

Yes — through Section 8 only. 37 grounds are available, including new grounds for selling (1A) and redevelopment (1B). You must prove specific grounds with evidence. Read our Section 8 guide for full details.

How much will this cost me?

Templates start from £10 each with free lifetime updates — we monitor UK law changes and updated versions appear free in your My Templates page. No subscriptions, no recurring fees. The Renters’ Rights Essential Pack bundles the key templates you need for May 2026 (£99). Or save with: Essentials Pack (8 templates), Correspondence Pack (7 templates), Eviction Pack (6 templates), or the Landlord Ultimate Bundle (all 31 templates).

What if I already purchased templates?

You’re covered. Free lifetime updates — we monitor UK law changes and updated versions appear free in your My Templates page. No extra charges. No recurring fees.


The Truth About “Free” Legal Template Sites (What You’re Really Signing Up For)

Most websites advertising a “free legal template” follow the same pattern. You click because it’s free. You spend 10–15 minutes filling in questions.

And right at the end — only after you’ve invested your time — you’re hit with “Create your account first,” “Start your 7-day trial,” or “Card required — auto-renews at £29–£39 a month.”

This isn’t a template. This is a subscription funnel.

Why These “Free” Templates Are a Legal Risk

  • Outdated wording not aligned with current UK law
  • Missing mandatory clauses required for legal validity
  • Generic content copied from US or non-UK templates
  • No guidance on requirements
  • No structured checklist to verify the document works

Hidden Problem: Many “Free Template” Sites Aren’t UK-Based

  • Incorrect terminology taken from US contract law
  • Missing UK statutory references — essential legal requirements omitted
  • Non-applicable clauses that don’t apply under UK legislation
  • Legal conflicts risking breach of UK consumer, employment, or GDPR rules

Why Templates UK Does the Opposite

  • Drafted by UK professionals — written by experienced business and legal experts
  • UK-law only — no US crossover or generic “international” templates
  • One-time price from £10 — no subscriptions, no renewals
  • Full preview — see the exact document before buying
  • Two versions included — Editor + Interview formats
  • Lifetime access — free lifetime updates included, including all Renters’ Rights Act 2025 changes

My Templates Dashboard

After purchase, access all your templates from your My Templates dashboard — download, re-download, and access updates anytime.

Transparent Pricing

One-time price from £10 per template. No hourly rates. No hidden fees. No subscriptions.

Not ready to buy? Use our free interactive checklist to see exactly what you need first.

No tricks. No trials. No hidden fees. Just the exact UK-specific legal documents you came for — at the price we told you upfront.

Or save with the Landlord Ultimate Bundle — all 31 templates, one purchase, free lifetime updates.

FREE Landlord Compliance Checklist

Every Obligation in Chronological Order — Deadlines, Penalties & Direct Links to GOV.UK Resources

Start Free Compliance Checklist
Interactive • Saves Progress • PDF Download • Always Free

Get Every Template in One Bundle

The UK Legal Templates Ultimate Bundle includes all 91 templates across every category — one purchase, every template, free lifetime updates including all future law changes.


Explore Template Bundles by Category

Browse all bundle options →


Save with Residential Landlord Bundle Packs

View all landlord bundle options →


Master Business Legal Templates Pillar Guide

UK Business Legal Templates — Complete Guide (37 Templates)


All Templates UK Pillar Guides


Related Guides


Free Legal Templates & Interactive Checklists

Access all our free UK legal templates, checklists and downloadable PDFs.

Browse Free Templates →

FREE Landlord Compliance Checklist

Every Obligation in Chronological Order — Deadlines, Penalties & Direct Links to GOV.UK Resources

Start Free Compliance Checklist
Interactive • Saves Progress • PDF Download • Always Free

Last updated: March 2026

Disclaimer: This guide provides general UK legal information for England only, not legal advice. Laws current as of March 2026 — Renters’ Rights Act 2025 Phase 1 takes effect 1 May 2026. Always verify current requirements with official sources. For complex situations, consider professional legal advice.