The Renters’ Rights Bill, now enacted as the Renters’ Rights Act 2025, represents a historic overhaul of the private rental sector in England, offering the most significant improvements to tenant protections in over three decades.
The legislation abolishes ‘no-fault’ evictions, replacing them with fairer grounds for landlords to regain possession, and moves all rentals to ongoing periodic tenancies that give tenants greater security and flexibility.
It also bans rental bidding wars by requiring fixed advertised rents, introduces stronger health and safety standards including protections against damp and mould and establishes a new Private Rented Sector Ombudsman to resolve disputes swiftly.
These sweeping reforms aim to rebalance the landlord-tenant relationship, protect vulnerable renters, and promote a fairer and more transparent rental market across England.
What is the Renters’ Rights Bill/Renters’ Rights Act 2025?
The Renters’ Rights Bill now called the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 is the most significant reform of the private rental sector in England in over 30 years, designed to improve tenant security and regulate rental practices.
It abolishes ‘no-fault’ evictions, restricts rent bidding wars, and introduces stronger dispute resolution and property condition standards.
When will the Renters’ Rights Bill come into force?
The Bill received Royal Assent in October 2025 and is expected to be implemented soon, with exact dates confirmed by the government. Landlords and tenants will be given notice ahead of the changes.
How does the Bill change eviction rules?
Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions are abolished. Landlords can only end tenancies based on specific legal grounds, such as tenant rent arrears, anti-social behaviour, or the landlord needing to sell or move into the property. All tenancies become rolling periodic contracts, giving tenants more security.
What about rental bidding wars?
Landlords must advertise properties at a fixed rent and cannot accept rent offers above the advertised amount, effectively ending bidding wars. However, landlords might set initial rents higher to offset this restriction.
How are rent increases handled?
Rent can only be increased once every 12 months via a formal Section 13 notice process based on market rates. Tenants have the right to challenge excessive rent hikes at a First-tier Tribunal.
What new protections are there for tenants’ health and safety?
The Bill extends “Awaab’s law” to the private rental sector, compelling landlords to address serious damp and mould problems promptly to protect tenant health.
What dispute resolution mechanisms are introduced?
A new Private Rented Sector Landlord Ombudsman will provide a faster, fairer alternative to the courts for resolving tenant complaints against landlords.
What impact might the Bill have on landlords?
The increased regulation and costs may lead some small landlords to exit the rental market, potentially paving the way for larger institutional landlords to dominate, which could influence rent levels and availability.
Can tenants end a tenancy at any time?
Yes. Tenants can end a tenancy with two months’ notice, contributing to greater flexibility and security than previous fixed-term leases.
How will local authorities enforce these new rules?
Local councils will use a new enforcement database and have powers to impose financial penalties on landlords who breach the rental bidding ban or other regulations.