(England)
Formal agreement allowing pets in rental properties with clear conditions and responsibilities.
Professional pet addendum covering pet descriptions, damage liability, cleaning requirements, and landlord protections — structured following the Renters' Rights Act 2025 and Tenant Fees Act 2019 requirements for England.
Download a professionally drafted Pet Addendum template for landlords in England. Also known as pet agreement, pet rental addendum, or pet clause. Covers pet descriptions, damage liability, cleaning requirements, landlord protections, and tenant responsibilities. Structured following the Renters' Rights Act 2025 and Tenant Fees Act 2019 requirements for England. Wales operates under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016. Scotland operates under the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016.
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Under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 you have three options — approve, approve with conditions, or refuse — but a refusal needs genuine, property-specific reasons, and an unreasonable refusal (or no reply at all) can lead to the tenant applying to court. Our Pet Permission Decision Notice handles all three outcomes and documents your reasons within the statutory deadline. Approving? Pair it with this Pet Addendum to set the conditions.
The Renters' Rights Act 2025 took effect on 1 May 2026, and every tenancy now needs multiple compliance documents — Written Statement of Terms (fines up to £7,000), Information Sheet delivery proof, the 28-day Pet Permission Decision Notice, and Section 8 grounds with evidence. Our Renters' Rights Essential Pack bundles the key templates in one place — including this Pet Addendum and the Pet Permission Decision Notice.
Essential for all landlords allowing pets in rental properties — document pet permission formally, protect your property with clear conditions, and attract responsible pet-owning tenants.
A formal supplement documenting landlord permission for specific pets, setting clear conditions, damage liability, and maintenance requirements—increasingly important under the Renters' Rights Act 2025.
A pet addendum is a formal supplement to a tenancy agreement documenting landlord permission for tenants to keep specific pets in rental properties. It records pet details (type, breed, weight, age), establishes additional conditions beyond standard tenancy terms, clarifies damage liability, and sets cleaning/maintenance requirements. Attaches to and forms part of the main assured periodic tenancy (APT) agreement.
Legal clarity: Prevents disputes by documenting exactly which pets are allowed with what conditions. Damage protection: Confirms tenant liability for pet damage beyond normal wear. Insurance compliance: Satisfies landlord insurance requirements for pet documentation. Eviction grounds: Provides breach evidence if pet terms violated.
Our template provides comprehensive pet permission documentation with property protection clauses and tenant responsibilities.
Undocumented pet permission exposes landlords to unrecoverable damage costs, insurance claim denials, multiple unauthorised pets, difficult evictions, and lost rental income—written agreements protect both parties.
Tenant asks "can we get a small dog?" Landlord says "yes, should be fine" without documentation. Months later: carpets damaged, doors scratched, garden fouling complaints from neighbours. Tenant claims the dog was always permitted. Deposit scheme sides with tenant as no written conditions exist. Landlord faces the full repair bill.
Pet Addendums protect both parties - documenting permission while establishing clear responsibilities and consequences.
Our template covers pet descriptions, damage liability, cleaning requirements, noise prevention, flea treatment, inspection rights, and landlord protections for unauthorised animals or breaches.
Covers cats, dogs, caged animals, and other common domestic pets with full property protection and tenant liability clauses.
Related documents: Landlords allowing pets typically also need AST Agreement, Inventory & Schedule of Condition, and Property Inspection Report.
Avoid vague descriptions, verbal-only permission, missing insurance notification, excessive pets, and absent cleaning clauses—written specifications and clear damage liability protect both landlords and tenants.
Our template includes all essential clauses with clear tenant responsibilities, damage liability, and landlord protection provisions.
Yes. Government guidance since 2021 recommends allowing pets by default, with tenants requesting written permission.
From 1 May 2026, the Renters' Rights Act 2025 turns this into law — tenants gain a statutory right to request a pet, landlords must respond within 28 days, and blanket "no pets" policies become unlawful.
You can still refuse for reasonable grounds (property unsuitability, lease restrictions, property size).
A Pet Addendum documents pet permission with clear conditions, protecting your property while meeting your obligations.
Essential clauses: pet description (type, breed, weight, age); damage liability confirmation; professional cleaning requirements; flea/pest treatment obligations; noise and nuisance prevention; garden/outdoor area maintenance; waste disposal requirements; veterinary care confirmation; pet insurance requirements; restrictions (breeding, additional animals); landlord inspection rights.
Document everything in writing as a formal supplement to your tenancy agreement with both parties signing.
Tenant deposits are capped at 5 weeks' rent regardless of pets, and you cannot charge a separate "pet deposit" or pet fee under the Tenant Fees Act 2019. You also cannot require a tenant to take out or pay for pet damage insurance.
Rent must be set in line with local market rates, and under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 it can generally only be increased once a year and not in the first 12 months. Some landlords let pet-friendly properties at the higher end of the local market range, but rent should reflect the property's market value rather than act as a pet surcharge.
Many landlords instead charge slightly higher monthly rent to offset pet-related wear and cleaning costs. This approach generates ongoing income rather than one-time deposit contributions.
Unauthorized pets breach the tenancy agreement. First, send written notice confirming the breach and requiring pet removal within 14 days.
If tenants refuse, this may support a Section 8 Ground 12 possession claim (breach of tenancy obligations) — though courts have discretion and will consider whether possession is reasonable.
Document the breach thoroughly. From 1 May 2026, Section 21 is abolished, so all possession claims must go through the courts via Section 8.
Consider offering a Pet Addendum if the pet causes no problems — a written agreement is far preferable to lengthy court proceedings.
Yes. Standard landlord insurance often excludes or limits pet damage coverage. Inform your insurer in writing when allowing pets - premiums typically increase £30-100 annually but provide essential coverage for pet-caused damage beyond normal wear (carpet destruction, scratched doors, garden damage).
You may encourage tenants to consider pet liability insurance (covering third-party injury or damage), though from 1 May 2026 you cannot require it as a condition or charge tenants for it under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 — that provision was removed from the Act.
Focus on clear written conditions in your Pet Addendum and thorough inventory records to protect your position.
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