Updated: February 2026 • Based on UK Law

England Only: This guide covers Section 8 notices under the Housing Act 1988 for England only. Wales operates under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016 with different rules. Scotland and Northern Ireland have separate housing legislation. Always verify which legal framework applies to your property.
Major Law Changes: 1 May 2026 The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 (Royal Assent 27 October 2025) fundamentally changes eviction law from 1 May 2026:
  • Section 21 abolished — No more “no-fault” evictions
  • Section 8 becomes the ONLY eviction route for all tenancies
  • New grounds added — Ground 1A (sale), Ground 4A (student HMOs), Ground 6A/6B
  • Ground 8 reformed — Now requires 3 months’ arrears (up from 2) with 4 weeks’ notice
  • Ground 1 reformed — Landlord/family occupation with 12-month protected period
  • 37 total grounds (up from 17) with longer notice periods
See affected templates: Section 8 Particulars Statement | AST Agreement | Late Rent Letter Pack | Breach of Tenancy Letter
Price Increase Notice: Template prices increase on 6 April 2026 due to major UK law changes. Customers who purchase now lock in current prices with free lifetime updates — including all Renters’ Rights Act 2025 changes at no extra cost.
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What Is a Section 8 Notice?

A Section 8 notice is a statutory eviction notice served on prescribed Form 3 under Housing Act 1988 citing specific grounds for possession. Landlord must prove mandatory grounds (court must grant) or discretionary grounds (court decides). From May 2026, Section 8 becomes the only eviction route following Section 21 abolition.

This guide covers Section 8 grounds for possession, notice periods, mandatory vs discretionary grounds, and court process. Free Section 8 checklist.

Section 8 eviction claims represent 65% of possession proceedings in England — and from 1 May 2026, that figure hits 100%.

Rent arrears (Ground 8 and 10) account for 78% of all Section 8 cases. Every single one of them requires the landlord to explain their grounds in writing on Form 3 — and most landlords write one vague sentence that gets thrown out at court.

Warning: The most common errors causing invalid notices are: using the wrong form (not prescribed Form 3), citing insufficient grounds evidence, giving incorrect notice period, serving notice during a prohibited period, and failing to include all required information. Invalid Section 8 notices allow tenants to remain and the landlord must serve a fresh valid notice.

The legal framework under Housing Act 1988 Schedule 2 establishes strict procedural requirements. Landlords must use prescribed Form 3, cite at least one statutory ground, give the correct notice period, prove grounds at court hearing, and obtain a possession order before evicting.

From 1 May 2026: Section 21 no-fault eviction is abolished under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025. All evictions must use Section 8 grounds-based possession with expanded grounds (37 total) and revised notice periods.

✓ Section 8 Particulars Statement Builder

This product does not replace Form 3 — you still download the official form from GOV.UK. Section 4 of Form 3 asks you to “give a full explanation of why each ground is being relied on.” Most landlords write one vague sentence that courts reject. Our guided builder drafts a professional particulars statement — ground by ground, with a chronological timeline and numbered evidence references. Print it, attach it to your Form 3, and walk into court prepared.

→ Section 8 Particulars Statement Builder

Prefer to do it yourself? Use our Section 8 checklist as a basic guide.


Major Law Changes: 1 May 2026 — Renters’ Rights Act 2025

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 27 October 2025 and takes effect in phases, with the main provisions commencing 1 May 2026.

This represents the biggest change to private renting law in a generation.

Key Changes Affecting Section 8:

Change Current Law (Until 30 April 2026) From 1 May 2026
Section 21 Available (2 months’ notice, no reason needed) ABOLISHED — Cannot be served after 30 April 2026
Eviction Route Section 21 or Section 8 Section 8 ONLY
Ground 8 (Serious Arrears) 2 months’ arrears, 2 weeks’ notice 3 months’ arrears, 4 weeks’ notice
Ground 1 (Landlord Occupation) 2 months’ notice, must have previously occupied 4 months’ notice, no previous occupation required, 12-month protected period
Ground 1A (Sale) Does not exist NEW — 4 months’ notice, 12-month protected period
Ground 6 (Redevelopment) 2 months’ notice 4 months’ notice
Total Grounds 17 grounds 37 grounds
Tenancy Type Fixed-term ASTs available All periodic — no fixed terms

12-Month Protected Period

From 1 May 2026, landlords cannot use Ground 1 (landlord/family occupation) or Ground 1A (sale) during the first 12 months of a tenancy.

This protects tenants from immediate eviction after moving in.

Universal Credit Exception for Ground 8

When calculating rent arrears for Ground 8, any arrears caused solely by delays in Universal Credit payments must be excluded.

This protects tenants from eviction due to benefit payment delays beyond their control.

PRS Database Requirement

From Phase 2 implementation, landlords must register on the new Private Rented Sector Database to use most Section 8 grounds.

Unregistered landlords will be unable to obtain possession orders (except for anti-social behaviour grounds).

Quick Answer: From 1 May 2026, Section 8 is the ONLY eviction route. Ground 8 now requires 3 months’ arrears (not 2) with 4 weeks’ notice (not 2). New grounds include Ground 1A for sale. Landlords who relied on Section 21 must now prove specific grounds at court.

Affected Templates — Update Now

The following templates are affected by these changes. Our templates include free lifetime updates, so customers who purchase now receive all Renters’ Rights Act 2025 updates at no extra cost:

See our complete guides: Section 21 Notice Guide UK | Assured Shorthold Tenancy Guide UK | Residential Landlord Documents Guide UK


What Is a Section 8 Notice in the UK?

Section 8 notice (formally “Notice seeking possession of a property let on an assured tenancy or an assured agricultural occupancy”) is a statutory eviction notice served under Housing Act 1988 Section 8 when a landlord wants to evict a tenant for cause.

Must be on prescribed Form 3, cite at least one statutory ground, and give notice period appropriate to ground cited (from immediate to 4 months depending on ground).

From 1 May 2026, Section 8 is the only eviction route following abolition of Section 21 under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025.

Expert Insight: Section 4 of Form 3 asks landlords to “give a full explanation of why each ground is being relied on” — and most write one or two vague sentences that courts regularly reject. A professionally drafted particulars statement with chronological evidence timeline and numbered references transforms a weak claim into a court-ready case.

What Is the UK Version of Section 8?

Section 8 IS the UK term — it refers to Section 8 of Housing Act 1988 governing grounds-based possession proceedings for assured tenancies in England.

Not to be confused with Section 8 Housing (US housing assistance program — completely different meaning) or Section 21 notice (UK no-fault eviction — abolished from 1 May 2026).

What Is Section 8 Called in the UK?

Formal name: “Notice seeking possession of a property let on an assured tenancy or an assured agricultural occupancy” (Housing Act 1988 Section 8).

Common names: Section 8 notice, S8 notice, Form 3 (the prescribed form number), fault-based eviction notice, grounds-based possession notice.

Always served on prescribed Form 3 available from gov.uk or legal suppliers. Using the wrong form invalidates the notice.

Section 8 Notice During Fixed Term UK?

Warning: From 1 May 2026, all tenancies become periodic under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025. Fixed-term tenancies will no longer exist for new tenancies, and existing fixed terms convert to periodic.

Until 30 April 2026: Section 8 can be served during a fixed-term tenancy ONLY if the tenancy agreement contains a forfeiture clause, OR the ground cited is Ground 2, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, or 15 (these don’t require a forfeiture clause).

Build your Section 8 particulars statement using our guided builder — it drafts a professional grounds explanation for Form 3 Section 4, ground by ground with evidence references.

Quick Answer: Section 8 notice is a grounds-based eviction notice under Housing Act 1988 requiring landlord to prove specific grounds at court. From 1 May 2026, it becomes the ONLY eviction route. Must use prescribed Form 3 and give correct notice period.

Section 8 Notices Must Follow Strict Legal Requirements to Be Valid

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Section 8 Grounds for Possession UK

From 1 May 2026, there will be 37 grounds for possession under the amended Housing Act 1988 Schedule 2.

Grounds remain divided into mandatory (court must order possession if proven) and discretionary (court decides if reasonable).

Key New and Reformed Grounds (From 1 May 2026):

Ground Type Basis Notice Restrictions
Ground 1 (Reformed) Mandatory Landlord or family member wants to occupy as main home 4 months 12-month protected period; cannot re-let for 12 months after possession
Ground 1A (NEW) Mandatory Landlord intends to sell property 4 months 12-month protected period; cannot re-let if sale falls through
Ground 4A (NEW) Mandatory Student HMO — academic year turnover 4 months Notice can only expire 1 June – 30 September; all tenants must be full-time students
Ground 6 (Reformed) Mandatory Demolition or substantial redevelopment 4 months Landlord must have acquired interest before tenancy started
Ground 6A (NEW) Mandatory Registered Provider refurbishment with alternative accommodation 4 months Social housing only
Ground 6B (NEW) Mandatory Compliance with enforcement action 4 months Court can order compensation to tenant
Ground 8 (Reformed) Mandatory Serious rent arrears (3+ months) 4 weeks Arrears must exist at notice AND hearing; UC delays excluded
Ground 7A (Reformed) Mandatory Severe anti-social behaviour or criminal behaviour Immediate Proceedings can begin immediately after notice served

Mandatory vs Discretionary Grounds Section 8

Mandatory grounds: Court MUST order possession if landlord proves the ground exists, regardless of tenant hardship or circumstances. No judicial discretion.

Example: Ground 8 (3+ months rent arrears from May 2026) — if proven at both notice and hearing, possession is automatic.

Expert Insight: Discretionary grounds mean the court CAN order possession if ground is proven AND considers it reasonable. The judge weighs tenant circumstances, proportionality, and alternative remedies. Example: Ground 10 (some rent arrears) — proven but court may refuse if tenant has a credible repayment plan or arrears reduced below 3 months before hearing.

Complete Section 8 Grounds Table (From 1 May 2026):

Ground Type Basis Notice Period
Ground 1 Mandatory Landlord/family wants to occupy as main home (REFORMED) 4 months
Ground 1A (NEW) Mandatory Landlord intends to sell property 4 months
Ground 2 Mandatory Mortgage lender enforcing repossession 2 months
Ground 3 Mandatory Out of season holiday let (max 8 months) 2 months
Ground 4 Mandatory Student accommodation out of term 2 months
Ground 4A (NEW) Mandatory Student HMO academic year turnover 4 months
Ground 5 Mandatory Property required for minister of religion 2 months
Ground 6 Mandatory Demolition or major reconstruction (REFORMED) 4 months
Ground 6A (NEW) Mandatory RP refurbishment with alternative accommodation 4 months
Ground 6B (NEW) Mandatory Compliance with enforcement action 4 months
Ground 7 Mandatory Death of periodic tenant (within 12 months) 2 months
Ground 7A Mandatory Severe anti-social behaviour/criminal activity (REFORMED) Immediate
Ground 8 Mandatory Serious rent arrears (3+ months) (REFORMED) 4 weeks
Ground 9 Discretionary Suitable alternative accommodation available 2 months
Ground 10 Discretionary Some rent arrears (any amount owed) 2 weeks
Ground 11 Discretionary Persistent delay in paying rent 2 weeks
Ground 12 Discretionary Breach of tenancy obligation 2 weeks
Ground 13 Discretionary Deterioration of dwelling (tenant waste) 2 weeks
Ground 14 Discretionary Nuisance, ASB, criminal conviction 2 weeks
Ground 14ZA Discretionary Riot conviction 2 weeks
Ground 14A Discretionary Domestic violence (ex-partner left) 2 weeks
Ground 15 Discretionary Deterioration of furniture (tenant waste) 2 weeks
Ground 16 Discretionary Property let to employee (employment ended) 2 months
Ground 17 Discretionary False statement induced grant of tenancy 2 weeks
Ground 18 (NEW) Discretionary Supported accommodation – tenant refused support 2 weeks

Green highlighted grounds: New or reformed under Renters’ Rights Act 2025.

Yellow highlighted grounds (8, 10, 12, 14): Most commonly used, accounting for 95% of Section 8 claims.

Key Takeaways: From 1 May 2026, 37 grounds exist (up from 17). Ground 8 now requires 3 months’ arrears with 4 weeks’ notice. New Ground 1A allows eviction for sale. Ground 1 reformed with 4 months’ notice. All evictions now Section 8 only.

Section 8 Notice Period by Ground UK

From 1 May 2026, notice periods have changed significantly.

Notice Period Quick Reference (From 1 May 2026):

4 MONTHS NOTICE GROUNDS:

  • Ground 1: Landlord/family wants to occupy (REFORMED)
  • Ground 1A: Landlord intends to sell (NEW)
  • Ground 4A: Student HMO academic turnover (NEW)
  • Ground 6: Demolition/reconstruction (REFORMED)
  • Ground 6A: RP refurbishment (NEW)
  • Ground 6B: Enforcement compliance (NEW)

4 WEEKS NOTICE GROUNDS:

  • Ground 8: Serious rent arrears — 3+ months (REFORMED from 2 weeks)

2 MONTHS NOTICE GROUNDS:

  • Ground 2: Mortgage lender repossession
  • Ground 3: Out of season holiday let
  • Ground 4: Student accommodation out of term
  • Ground 5: Minister of religion
  • Ground 7: Death of tenant
  • Ground 9: Suitable alternative accommodation
  • Ground 16: Employee tenancy (employment ended)

2 WEEKS NOTICE GROUNDS:

  • Ground 10: Some rent arrears (any amount)
  • Ground 11: Persistent late payment
  • Ground 12: Breach of tenancy obligations
  • Ground 13: Property deterioration (tenant waste)
  • Ground 14: Nuisance, ASB, criminal activity
  • Ground 14ZA: Riot conviction
  • Ground 14A: Domestic violence
  • Ground 15: Furniture deterioration
  • Ground 17: False statement to obtain tenancy
  • Ground 18: Supported accommodation — refused support (NEW)

IMMEDIATE (No notice period):

  • Ground 7A: Severe anti-social behaviour or serious criminal activity
Expert Insight: After the notice period expires, landlords must apply to court for a possession order — they cannot evict without a court order. The court process adds 4–8 months minimum due to current backlogs. Total eviction timeline: 5–12 months from notice to actual eviction depending on ground, court delays, and tenant defences.

How Much Notice Is Required to Evict a Tenant in the UK?

From 1 May 2026, the Section 8 notice period depends on the ground cited: Immediate for severe ASB, 2 weeks for most fault-based grounds, 4 weeks for serious rent arrears, 2 months for some circumstantial grounds, and 4 months for sale/occupation/redevelopment.

Quick Answer: Key notice periods from 1 May 2026: 4 months for sale/occupation/redevelopment grounds, 4 weeks for serious rent arrears (Ground 8), 2 weeks for most fault-based grounds, immediate for severe ASB (Ground 7A). Shorter notice than required invalidates the notice.

Section 8 vs Section 21 Notice Difference

Section 8 is grounds-based eviction requiring landlord to prove specific grounds at court (rent arrears, breach, nuisance, sale, occupation).

Section 21 was no-fault eviction requiring no reason — abolished from 1 May 2026 under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025.

Can I Still Serve a Section 21 Notice?

Warning: Section 21 notices can only be served until 30 April 2026. Notices served before 1 May 2026 remain valid ONLY if possession proceedings are issued by 31 July 2026. After that date, even pre-May 2026 Section 21 notices cannot be relied upon.

From 1 May 2026, ALL new evictions must use Section 8 grounds-based route. Section 21 is abolished permanently.

See our Section 21 Notice Guide UK for detailed transitional information.

Section 8 vs Section 21 Comparison:

Element Section 8 (From May 2026) Section 21 (Abolished May 2026)
Basis Grounds-based (37 specific grounds) No-fault (no reason needed)
Notice period Immediate — 4 months (depends on ground) 2 months minimum
Court proof required Yes — must prove ground(s) cited No — automatic possession if valid
Tenant defence Can challenge grounds/evidence Could only challenge validity (rare)
Court hearing Full hearing required for all claims Accelerated possession (paperwork only)
Timeline 5–12 months (notice + court + eviction) 4–6 months (notice + accelerated possession)
Status ONLY route from 1 May 2026 ABOLISHED 1 May 2026
Key Takeaways: Section 21 is abolished from 1 May 2026. All evictions must use Section 8 with specific grounds. Landlords who previously relied on Section 21 must adapt to proving grounds at court. New Ground 1A allows eviction for sale (4 months’ notice, 12-month protected period).
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How to Serve a Section 8 Notice in the UK

Serving a Section 8 notice requires strict compliance with the prescribed procedure.

Steps to serve:

  • Use prescribed Form 3 (available gov.uk — new form expected for May 2026 changes)
  • Complete all required fields accurately
  • Cite at least one of 37 grounds (from May 2026) with supporting evidence
  • Give correct notice period for ground(s) cited
  • Serve on all joint tenants
  • Send via email plus recorded delivery or hand delivery
  • Retain proof of service (delivery receipt, email confirmation)
Warning: From 1 May 2026, landlords must have registered on the PRS Database to use most grounds (except Ground 7A and 14 for anti-social behaviour). Invalid service or wrong form allows tenant to challenge the notice.
Expert Insight: Section 4 of Form 3 is where most landlords fail. Courts regularly reject vague one-sentence explanations. A professional particulars statement — with a chronological timeline, numbered evidence references, and ground-by-ground analysis — is the difference between a case that gets thrown out and one that succeeds. Our guided builder drafts this statement for you.

How Many Warnings Before Eviction in the UK?

No statutory requirement for warnings before a Section 8 notice — landlords can serve notice immediately when a ground exists.

However, best practice and some grounds benefit from prior warnings. Ground 10/11 (rent arrears) — warning letters improve the court case. Ground 12 (breach) — demonstrates landlord gave opportunity to remedy. Ground 14 (nuisance/ASB) — warnings strengthen discretionary ground evidence.

Use our Late Rent Letter Pack for rent arrears warnings and Breach of Tenancy Letter for breach warnings.

Invalid Section 8 Notice UK

A Section 8 notice is invalid if:

  • Wrong form used (not prescribed Form 3)
  • Incorrect notice period given for ground cited
  • No grounds stated or grounds incorrectly described
  • Served on only some joint tenants (must serve all)
  • Mathematical errors in rent arrears calculation (Ground 8/10)
  • From May 2026: Landlord not registered on PRS Database (most grounds)
  • Ground 8: Universal Credit delays not properly excluded from arrears calculation

Invalid notice allows tenant to remain — landlord must serve fresh valid notice.

Can Tenant Challenge Section 8 Notice UK?

Yes, tenants can challenge a Section 8 notice by:

  • Arguing notice invalid — wrong form, insufficient notice period, technical defects
  • Disputing grounds — rent arrears paid, breach remedied, ASB allegations false
  • Challenging reasonableness — proportionality, tenant circumstances (discretionary grounds)
  • Requesting suspended order — pay arrears by instalments, remedy breach
  • Counterclaiming disrepair — harassment offsets rent arrears
  • From May 2026: Arguing landlord not registered on PRS Database
  • Ground 8: Arguing arrears caused by Universal Credit delays (must be excluded)

Section 8 Court Process Timeline UK

Timeline from notice to eviction (from May 2026 — all claims require full hearing):

  • Week 1–16: Notice period (varies by ground: immediate to 4 months)
  • After notice expires: Landlord files court claim (Form N5)
  • Weeks 4–16 from filing: Court serves claim on tenant, tenant files defence
  • Weeks 12–32: Court hearing scheduled (4–8 months typical — expected to worsen)
  • Hearing: Judge decides possession based on evidence for grounds cited
  • If granted: 14–28 days for tenant to vacate
  • If tenant doesn’t vacate: Bailiff warrant applied for (2–4 weeks)

Total: 5–12 months from notice to actual eviction depending on case complexity, court delays, and tenant defences.

How Quickly Can You Be Evicted in the UK?

Fastest possible (from May 2026): Ground 7A (severe ASB) — immediate notice, immediate court application, priority hearing. Could be 2–3 months in extreme cases.

For rent arrears (Ground 8): 4 weeks’ notice + court application + full hearing = 4–6 months minimum from notice to actual eviction.

Typical realistic timeline: 6–10 months from notice to eviction (includes court delays). Cannot evict without court order and bailiff enforcement.

Quick Answer: Serve Section 8 on prescribed Form 3, cite specific grounds with evidence, and serve all joint tenants. From May 2026, must be registered on PRS Database for most grounds. Court process takes 4–8 months minimum. All claims now require full hearing.

Official Sources

Always verify current requirements with official sources before serving notices.

Section 8 Notices Must Follow Strict Legal Requirements to Be Valid

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Frequently Asked Questions: Section 8 Notice UK

What is a section 8 notice in the UK?

Section 8 notice is a statutory eviction notice served on prescribed Form 3 citing specific grounds for possession under Housing Act 1988.

Landlord must prove at least one of 37 grounds (from May 2026). From 1 May 2026, Section 8 becomes the only eviction route following abolition of Section 21.

Section 8 grounds for possession UK?

From 1 May 2026, 37 grounds exist (up from 17): mandatory (court must order possession if proven), discretionary (court decides reasonableness).

Key changes: Ground 8 now requires 3 months’ arrears. New Ground 1A allows eviction for sale. Ground 7A allows immediate proceedings for severe ASB.

Section 8 notice period by ground UK?

From 1 May 2026: 4 months for sale/occupation/redevelopment (Grounds 1, 1A, 4A, 6). 4 weeks for serious rent arrears (Ground 8). 2 weeks for most fault-based grounds. Immediate for severe ASB (Ground 7A).

Shorter notice than required invalidates the notice — tenant can defend on procedural grounds.

How to serve a section 8 notice in the UK?

Use prescribed Form 3, cite grounds with evidence, give correct notice period, serve all joint tenants via email plus recorded delivery, retain proof of service.

From May 2026: Must be registered on PRS Database for most grounds. After notice expires, apply to court for possession order.

Section 8 vs Section 21 notice difference?

Section 8 requires proving specific grounds (rent arrears, breach, sale) with court evidence. Section 21 was no-fault but is abolished from 1 May 2026.

From 1 May 2026, all evictions must use Section 8 grounds-based route. No accelerated possession — all claims require full hearing.

Can I still serve a section 21 notice?

Section 21 can only be served until 30 April 2026. Notices served before 1 May 2026 remain valid if proceedings issued by 31 July 2026.

From 1 May 2026, Section 21 is abolished permanently. All new evictions must use Section 8 grounds.

What is the new Ground 1A for selling property?

Ground 1A is a new mandatory ground from 1 May 2026 allowing landlords to evict if they intend to sell the property.

Requires 4 months’ notice. Cannot be used during first 12 months of tenancy (protected period). If sale falls through, landlord cannot re-let the property.

What changed for Ground 8 rent arrears?

From 1 May 2026: Threshold increased from 2 months to 3 months’ arrears. Notice period increased from 2 weeks to 4 weeks.

Universal Credit delays must be excluded from arrears calculation. Arrears must exist both at notice AND at hearing.

How quickly can you be evicted in the UK?

From May 2026: Fastest is Ground 7A (severe ASB) — could be 2–3 months. Ground 8 (rent arrears): 4–6 months minimum. Typical: 6–10 months from notice to eviction.

Longest: 12–18 months for defended discretionary claims. All claims now require full hearing — no accelerated possession.

What is the 12-month protected period?

From 1 May 2026, landlords cannot use Ground 1 (occupation) or Ground 1A (sale) during the first 12 months of a tenancy.

This protects tenants from eviction for sale or landlord occupation immediately after moving in. Other grounds remain available during this period.


The Truth About “Free” Legal Template Sites

Most websites advertising a “Free Section 8 Template” use the same trick.

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
  • No guidance on requirements
  • No structured checklist to verify the document works
  • Not kept updated when legislation changes

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

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Transparent Pricing

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

Not ready to buy? Start with our free Section 8 checklist to see if it covers what you need.

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Section 8 Notices Must Follow Strict Legal Requirements to Be Valid

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Section 8 Notices Must Follow Strict Legal Requirements to Be Valid

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Last updated: February 2026

Disclaimer: This guide provides general UK legal information for England only, not legal advice. Laws current as of February 2026 — Renters’ Rights Act 2025 main provisions take effect 1 May 2026. Always verify current requirements with official sources before serving notices.