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What Is a Right to Rent Share Code, and Why May Your Tenants Need One?

June 29, 2026
A Right to Rent share code is fast becoming the standard way tenants prove they can rent in England. Here's what a share code is, why your tenants now need one, how they generate it, and how to check it correctly to keep your statutory excuse.

 

A Right to Rent share code is fast becoming the standard way that many tenants prove they are allowed to rent a home in England — and if you are a landlord or letting agent, knowing how it works is now an essential part of your compliance process. As the Home Office moves to a fully digital immigration system, a growing number of your applicants will hand you a code rather than a passport or a plastic card. This guide explains what a Right to Rent share code is, why your tenants may need one, how they generate it, and how to check it correctly so that you keep your statutory excuse.

Contents

  1. What is a Right to Rent share code?
  2. Why might your tenants need a Right to Rent share code?
  3. Who needs a share code — and who does not
  4. How a tenant generates a Right to Rent share code
  5. How to check a share code as a landlord or agent
  6. Time-limited status and follow-up checks
  7. What happens if you get it wrong
  8. Common share code problems and how to fix them
  9. Right to Rent vs right to work share codes
  10. England only
  11. How LetHQ helps
  12. Frequently asked questions

What is a Right to Rent share code?

A Right to Rent share code is a unique, time-limited code that a tenant generates through the official ‘Prove your right to rent in England’ service on GOV.UK. It links to that person’s immigration record held by the Home Office. The tenant gives the code to their landlord or letting agent, who then uses it to view the person’s status online and confirm whether they are allowed to rent — and, if so, for how long.

The code itself is a nine-character alphanumeric string, and Right to Rent codes always begin with the letter “R”. It is free to generate and is valid for 90 days from the date it is created. Importantly, the code does not, on its own, grant anyone the right to rent. It simply gives you secure, real-time access to the Home Office result, which shows the person’s photo, name, immigration status and any time limit on their permission.

Why might your tenants need a Right to Rent share code?

Right to Rent checks are a legal requirement for every landlord in England under the Immigration Act 2014. Before a tenancy begins, you must confirm that every adult who will live in the property as their main home has the right to rent — even those not named on the tenancy agreement. For many tenants, a Right to Rent share code is now the only valid way to do that.

The reason is the Home Office’s shift to digital immigration status. Physical biometric residence permits (BRPs) have been phased out and replaced by online eVisas, accessed through a UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) account. Where a person’s status is held digitally — which now applies to most non-UK and non-Irish nationals, including those with settled or pre-settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme — the law requires their right to rent to be proven through the online service using a share code. A plastic card on its own is no longer acceptable evidence, and you cannot establish a statutory excuse by relying on it.

In practical terms, this means your tenant needs a share code so that you can complete a compliant check. Without a valid code (or acceptable original documents, where the tenant is entitled to use them), you cannot finish the check, and you should pause the tenancy rather than proceed and risk a penalty.

Who needs a share code — and who does not

British and Irish citizens cannot get a Right to Rent share code. They prove their right to rent using acceptable original documents, such as a valid passport, or via a certified Identity Service Provider (IDSP) using identity document validation technology. If a British or Irish applicant offers you a code, it is not a Right to Rent code — you will need to check their documents instead.

Non-UK and non-Irish nationals whose status is digital will typically need a share code. This includes EU, EEA and Swiss nationals with status under the EU Settlement Scheme, and most people granted a visa under the UK’s digital immigration system.

There is one important fairness point to keep in mind. Some tenants still hold acceptable physical documents and are entitled to use them — for example, certain people with indefinite leave to remain. You cannot reject a tenant simply because they chose to prove their status with an eligible document rather than a share code; doing so risks unlawful discrimination. Equally, you must not insist on physical documents from someone whose status is digital, because for them the online check is the only valid route. The safe approach is to apply the same fair, consistent process to every applicant. You can find the full list of acceptable documents in the Home Office’s guide to right to rent document checks.

How a tenant generates a Right to Rent share code

It helps to be able to talk your applicants through the process, as a smooth share code makes for a faster tenancy. To generate a Right to Rent share code, a tenant should:

  1. Go to the GOV.UK service to get a share code online and sign in to their UKVI account (or create one if they have never used the service).
  2. Confirm the identity document linked to their digital status — usually their current passport.
  3. Select the option to prove their right to rent (not right to work), and follow the security steps.
  4. Receive their nine-character share code, beginning with “R” and valid for 90 days.
  5. Share the code and their date of birth with you, as you will need both to run the check.

A common pitfall is leaving this to the last minute. If a tenant has trouble accessing their UKVI account or their details are out of date, it can hold up the whole tenancy — so it is worth asking for the code early in the process.

How to check a share code as a landlord or agent

Checking a Right to Rent share code is a prescribed legal process, not just a quick look at a website. To establish a statutory excuse, you must use the official ‘View a tenant’s right to rent in England’ service on GOV.UK and follow these steps:

  1. Enter the tenant’s share code and date of birth into the online service.
  2. Review the result, which shows the tenant’s photo, name, whether they have an unlimited or time-limited right to rent, and any expiry date.
  3. Confirm the photo and details match the person in front of you — either in person or over a live video call.
  4. Save or print a clear copy of the online check result and keep it securely.

Carrying out the check correctly and keeping the record gives you a statutory excuse — a complete defence against a civil penalty if the tenant later turns out to be disqualified. Skip a step, and that protection falls away.

Time-limited status and follow-up checks

If the online result shows your tenant has a time-limited right to rent, your statutory excuse is also time-limited. You must carry out a follow-up check before the earlier of the date their permission expires, or 12 months from your previous check. At that point the tenant will usually need to generate a fresh Right to Rent share code, as the original will have long since passed its 90-day validity.

If a follow-up check shows the tenant no longer has the right to rent, you must report this to the Home Office to maintain your position. Diarising the expiry date and the follow-up date at the time of the original check is the simplest way to stay on top of this.

What happens if you get it wrong

The penalties for renting to someone without the right to rent rose sharply on 13 February 2024 and are now significant. Under the Home Office’s Right to Rent code of practice, a landlord without a statutory excuse can face:

  • First breach: up to £5,000 per lodger and up to £10,000 per occupier.
  • Repeat breach (within three years): up to £10,000 per lodger and up to £20,000 per occupier.
  • Criminal offence: knowingly renting to a disqualified person can lead to up to five years’ imprisonment, an unlimited fine, or both.

Because these fines are charged per person rather than per property, the costs add up quickly. A correctly checked share code, properly recorded, is your protection. You can read more in our guide to Right to Rent and the rising costs of non-compliance.

Common share code problems and how to fix them

Most share code issues are not about eligibility — they are about timing and accuracy. The usual culprits are:

  • An expired code. Share codes last 90 days. If the window has closed, simply ask the tenant to generate a new one.
  • The wrong type of code. A right to work code will not work on the Right to Rent service. Ask for a code generated through the ‘Prove your right to rent’ service — remember, Right to Rent codes begin with “R”.
  • Details that do not match. Differences in name spelling, name order or date of birth can cause a failure. The tenant may need to update their UKVI account.
  • No access to the linked email or phone. The tenant should contact the UKVI Resolution Centre to regain access.

Where a tenant genuinely cannot prove their status online — for example, because they have an outstanding application or appeal — you can use the Home Office Landlord Checking Service to request a decision. Never refuse a tenant outright over a technical glitch, as that can amount to discrimination.

Right to Rent vs right to work share codes

Share codes are purpose-specific, and it is easy for tenants to generate the wrong one. A right to work share code (used by employers) is created through a different GOV.UK service and will not return a result on the Right to Rent checker. If a code does not work, the most likely explanation is that the tenant used the right to work service by mistake. Asking them to confirm the code starts with “R” is a quick way to catch this.

England only

The Right to Rent scheme — and therefore the Right to Rent share code — applies only in England. There is no requirement to carry out Right to Rent checks for property in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, although separate identity and tenancy rules apply in those nations. It is also worth noting that Right to Rent sits under the Immigration Act 2014 and is entirely separate from the Renters’ Rights Act 2026. The Renters’ Rights Act changes how tenancies work, but it does not remove your Right to Rent obligations — both regimes apply at the same time.

How LetHQ helps you stay compliant

Keeping on top of share codes, follow-up dates and record-keeping across a portfolio is exactly the kind of admin that LetHQ is built to remove. Our Digital Right to Rent Checks use UK Government certified Identity Document Validation Technology (IDVT) to verify British and Irish tenants in minutes, while our platform helps you manage the online checks and evidence you need for digital-status tenants — all in one place.

You can also bring together full tenant referencing and Digital ID checks, so you can verify, reference and comply before you hand over the keys. To find out more, get in touch with our team or call 0343 612 2233 today.

Frequently asked questions

How long is a Right to Rent share code valid?

A Right to Rent share code is valid for 90 days from the date the tenant generates it. You can use it more than once within that window. If it has expired, ask the tenant to generate a new one.

Do British citizens need a Right to Rent share code?

No. British and Irish citizens cannot generate a Right to Rent share code. They prove their right to rent using acceptable original documents, such as a passport, or through a certified Identity Service Provider.

Can I refuse a tenant who gives me a document instead of a share code?

No. If a tenant is entitled to prove their status with an acceptable document, you cannot reject them for choosing that route over a share code — doing so risks unlawful discrimination. Apply the same fair process to every applicant.

What information do I need to check a share code?

You need the tenant’s nine-character share code and their date of birth. You enter both into the ‘View a tenant’s right to rent in England’ service on GOV.UK, then confirm the photo and details match the person.

What is the difference between a Right to Rent and a right to work share code?

They are generated through different GOV.UK services and are not interchangeable. A right to work code (used by employers) will not return a result on the Right to Rent checker. Right to Rent codes begin with the letter “R”.

Does Right to Rent apply outside England?

No. The Right to Rent scheme applies only in England. You do not need to carry out Right to Rent checks for property in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

Looking for more landlord and letting agent guides? Explore our resources on the LetHQ blog.

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