Press release

Stronger support against rogue landlords

Tenants to be given stronger protections against rogue landlords.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
Housing

Tenants will be given stronger protections against rogue landlords under measures announced today (5 February 2015).

The government introduced proposals that would stop the small minority of rogue landlords who evict tenants simply for asking for essential repairs to be made.

Protection against retaliatory eviction

Whilst the vast majority of landlords offer a good quality professional service, a few rogues shirk their legal responsibilities and use the threat of eviction to silence tenants from rightly speaking out against sub-standard and dangerous accommodation.

The government published amendments to the , which will extend the existing restrictions on a landlord鈥檚 powers to evict, where they don鈥檛 protect a deposit or have a licence they are required to hold, to situations where a health and safety hazard has been identified by environmental health officers.

Today鈥檚 measures would stop the small minority of rogue landlords who, rather than meet their legal duty to keep their properties at a reasonable standard and remove health and safety hazards, instead evict their tenants.

The move is also designed to strike the right balance, so they only target bad landlords and cannot be used by tenants to frustrate legitimate evictions. And it avoids excessive regulation, which would push up rents and restrict supply in the private rented sector, reducing choice for tenants.

Communities Minister Stephen Williams said:

We鈥檙e determined to create a bigger, better private rented sector 鈥� a key part of that is to tackle the minority of rogue landlords that blight the lives of their tenants.

That鈥檚 why I鈥檓 proposing changes to the law that would outlaw 鈥榬etaliatory evictions鈥�, so tenants don鈥檛 face the prospect of losing their home simply for asking that repairs be made.

Tackling rogue landlords

The government has given councils 拢6.7 million to tackle rogue landlords in their area.

Using that funding, 30 councils have inspected more than 30,000 properties, while more than 3,000 landlords face further action and prosecution.

This is one of a range of measures the government has taken to create a bigger, better private rented sector, including:

  • launching a new Model Tenancy Agreement so tenants can ask for longer tenancies if they choose to
  • a How to rent guide so tenants and landlords alike know their rights and responsibilities when renting privately
  • new rules requiring letting agents to belong to one of 3 redress schemes, so any tenant or landlord who gets a poor service has somewhere to go with their complaint
  • proposed new rules requiring letting agents to publish full details of the fees they charge to tenants
  • an industry-led making clear the legal requirements and best practice
  • a 拢1 billion Build to Rent fund to deliver homes specifically for private rent

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Updates to this page

Published 5 February 2015