The Renters' Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 27 October 2025. Section 21 'no fault' evictions are abolished from 1 May 2026. If you're a landlord in England, this changes your risk fundamentally.
What Section 21 actually was — and what losing it means
Section 21 of the Housing Act 1988 allowed landlords to regain possession of their property without needing to give a reason. Two months' notice, serve the correct form, and if the tenant didn't leave you could apply to the court for a possession order. Accelerated possession claims under Section 21 typically completed in 8-16 weeks.
It was, in effect, a backstop. Many landlords who faced difficult tenants used it not because they had no grounds, but because it was simpler, faster, and more certain than proving a Section 8 ground.
From 1 May 2026 that backstop is gone. You can only regain possession through legally defined Section 8 grounds — things you have to prove to a judge. And the timeline for contested possession claims currently runs at a median of 27 weeks — with many taking considerably longer.
The financial maths of a bad tenant in 2026
Typical cost of a contested eviction post-May 2026
Legal costs £2,000–5,000 · Lost rent during proceedings £5,000–12,000 · Potential property damage £2,000–8,000+. Total exposure: £10,000–25,000 in a worst-case scenario.
This is before accounting for the stress, time, and disruption involved in a contested possession claim. For a landlord with one or two properties — which describes the vast majority of private landlords in England — this is not a theoretical risk. It's a business-ending one.
What the new Section 8 grounds require
The Renters' Rights Act expands and clarifies the available Section 8 grounds. The key mandatory grounds relevant to most landlords are:
- Ground 8 — rent arrears: Tenant owes two months' rent or more. You must have evidence.
- Ground 10 — some rent arrears: Discretionary — some arrears but not necessarily two months.
- Ground 12 — breach of tenancy: Tenant has breached a material term — damage, unauthorised occupants, nuisance. You need documented evidence.
- Ground 14 — anti-social behaviour: Must be evidenced and often requires police or council records.
The word 'evidenced' appears above because that is now what the law requires. You cannot rely on the fact that you'd simply like the property back. You need a paper trail.
Why tenant screening is now your primary protection
The logic is straightforward. If removing a bad tenant now costs £10,000–25,000 and takes 6-18 months, the value of not having a bad tenant in the first place has increased dramatically. A thorough tenant check that prevents one bad letting decision is worth more than its cost by an order of magnitude.
This is not hypothetical risk management. It is arithmetic.
What a standard reference check misses
Most standard referencing — credit check, employer call, previous landlord reference — costs around £30 and checks three things. It misses:
- County court judgments that haven't yet hit the credit register
- Whether the stated employer actually exists and actively employs them
- Address history gaps and inconsistencies
- The background of anyone else moving in — partners, family members, friends
- Previous tenancy disputes in public record
- Insolvency proceedings that affect their ability to pay rent reliably
- Digital footprint inconsistencies that suggest the stated identity isn't quite right
Each of these is a real risk category. Each is checkable from public sources. None of them appear in a standard £30 reference.
The co-occupant gap
This is the screening gap that most landlords don't think about until it's too late. The lead applicant looks great — employed, clean credit, good reference. The partner moving in with them has a history of anti-social behaviour at their previous address and two CCJs from unpaid debts.
Under the new law, both of them are in your property, and getting either of them out requires legal grounds and evidence. The person moving in with your tenant is your risk too. Check everyone.
We investigate all named occupants across 14 public sources — identity, CCJs, insolvency, employer verification, digital footprint, previous disputes — and deliver a plain English verdict within 48 hours. £199 for up to 2 adults, £249 for 3 or more. Plain English verdict, all flags explained, recommended questions to ask.
Order a Tenant Intelligence Report — £199 →What else changes from 1 May 2026
Beyond the Section 21 abolition, other changes take effect simultaneously:
- All tenancies become periodic: Fixed-term ASTs are abolished. All new tenancies are rolling from day one. Tenants can leave with two months' notice at any time.
- Rent increases limited to once per year: With two months' notice. Tenants can challenge at tribunal.
- Discrimination banned: You cannot refuse to rent to someone on benefits or with children. Screening must focus on financial suitability and references only.
- Mandatory information sheet: You must provide tenants with a prescribed Tenant Information Sheet explaining the new regime.
- PRS Database and Ombudsman: Registration required from later in 2026. Non-registration prevents you from serving possession notices.
The practical checklist for landlords right now
- Run a thorough background check on every applicant — not just a credit check
- Check every adult who will occupy the property, not just the lead applicant
- Verify the employer independently — don't rely on the reference number they give you
- Ask directly about any gaps in address history or employment
- Update your tenancy agreement to remove any Section 21-related clauses
- Start keeping a record of all communications with tenants — this becomes your evidence base if you ever need to claim a Section 8 ground
- Register with the PRS Database when it opens
- Join the mandatory Ombudsman scheme
The landlords who prepared for this change — who tightened their screening, updated their documentation, and built good tenant relationships — will find the new regime entirely manageable. The ones who carried on as before and assumed they'd always have Section 21 as a backstop are the ones who will find 2026 difficult.