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Guide to the Renters’ Rights Act 2026

February 11, 2026
The Renters’ Rights Act 2026 brings sweeping reforms to England’s rental market, including stronger tenant rights, controlled rent increases, and updated landlord obligations. Learn what changes from 1 May 2026.

Renters’ Rights Act

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 represents the most sweeping overhaul of private rental law in England in decades. Its core provisions come into force from 1 May 2026, fundamentally changing how tenancies work, ending unfair evictions, and giving tenants stronger protections and greater stability. The changes build upon earlier proposals outlined in the Renters Rights Bill.

What is the Renters’ Rights Act?

The Renters’ Rights Act is a new UK law designed to transform the private rented sector by:

  • Ending “no-fault” evictions

  • Strengthening tenant security

  • Rebalancing rights between landlords and tenants

  • Introducing new fairness and transparency protections

It received Royal Assent in October 2025, and most of its major legal changes come into force in May 2026.

Changes from 1 May 2026

1. No More “No-Fault” Evictions

Under previous law, landlords could evict tenants without reason using a Section 21 notice.

From May 2026, Section 21 will be abolished.

Landlords must now provide a valid legal reason (Section 8 grounds) to regain possession, such as:

  • Rent arrears

  • Breach of tenancy agreement

  • Anti-social behaviour

This significantly improves security for tenants.

2. Automatic Move to Periodic Tenancies

All existing and new Assured Shorthold Tenancies (ASTs) will automatically convert into open-ended, rolling Assured Periodic Tenancies.

This means:

  • No fixed end dates

  • Tenants can stay indefinitely

  • Tenants must give at least two months’ written notice to leave

This gives tenants greater flexibility and control.

3. Limits on Advance Rent

Tenants will no longer be required to pay large upfront rent payments.

For new tenancies:

  • Advance rent can be no more than one month’s rent

This especially benefits students and lower-income renters previously asked to pay termly or yearly rent upfront.

4. Rent Increases Limited

Rent increases will be more controlled:

  • Only one rent increase per 12-month period

  • Landlords must give at least two months’ notice

  • Tenants can challenge increases at a tribunal if the rent exceeds fair market value

This creates greater predictability and fairness.

5. Ban on Bidding Wars and Discrimination

The Act will outlaw:

  • Rent bidding wars (landlords cannot accept offers above the advertised price)

  • Blanket bans on tenants with children

  • Blanket bans on tenants receiving benefits

Each application must be considered individually.

This promotes fairness and equal access to housing.

6. Pet Rights

Tenants gain a legal right to request permission for pets.

Landlords must:

  • Consider requests reasonably

  • Provide a valid reason if refusing

This effectively ends many broad “no pets” clauses.

What This Means for Tenants

These reforms are designed to make renting fairer and more stable.

Tenants can expect:

  • Greater protection from eviction

  • Freedom to leave without long fixed terms

  • Fairer rent negotiations

  • Better access to housing opportunities

Tenants should also understand how tenant credit scores may impact their rental applications, particularly as landlords place greater emphasis on financial reliability and affordability checks.

All new rights begin from 1 May 2026, so tenants should familiarise themselves with the changes before then.

What Landlords Must Do

From May 2026 landlords will need to:

  • Update tenancy agreements and processes

  • Ensure eviction notices comply with new standards

  • Respect limits on advance rent and rent increases

  • Consider tenant applications fairly

Landlords should review their tenant referencing procedures, complete compliant Right to Rent checks, and use secure Digital ID Checks to ensure all new tenancies meet updated legal requirements.

Landlords may also face future obligations under later phases of the Act.

Future Phases (2026–2035)

While the 2026 reforms focus on tenancy rights and eviction law, later stages may introduce:

  • A Private Rented Sector Ombudsman (expected late 2026)

  • A landlord property and compliance database

  • A new Decent Homes Standard for private rented homes (enforced by 2035)

Final Thoughts

The Renters’ Rights Act 2026 will reshape how renting works in England, giving tenants more stability and fairness while setting clearer obligations for landlords.

Whether you’re a tenant, landlord, or letting agent, understanding these changes ahead of 1 May 2026 is essential to prepare and remain compliant.

As rental legislation continues to evolve, staying compliant has never been more important. If you’re a landlord or letting agent looking to streamline your tenant referencing, Right to Rent checks, or overall compliance processes, visit LetHQ to see how our digital solutions can support you.

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