Breaking Property News 23/09/25

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PAT Testing explained: What Landlords, Agents and Operators need to know

What Is PAT testing?

PAT stands for Portable Appliance Testing. It’s the process of checking electrical appliances—anything that plugs into a socket—to make sure they are safe to use. This includes everything from kettles and toasters in a rental property, to lamps, TVs, microwaves, or even office IT equipment.

The testing is twofold, Visual inspection — looking for damage such as frayed wires, cracked casings, or scorch marks. Plus, Electronic test — using a PAT testing device to measure earth continuity, insulation resistance, and polarity to ensure the appliance is electrically sound.

Once completed, each appliance is either passed or failed, usually with a label attached, and the landlord or managing agent receives a certificate or digital report.

Is PAT Testing a Legal Requirement?

Though not strictly a legal requirement in England and Wales, it falls under the Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulations 1994 and ties in with your duty of care under the Housing Act 2004. Neglect it, and you expose your tenants to electrical hazards, increase fire risk, and potentially compromise your liability in a dispute and invalidates insurance cover. By undertaking this electrical testing you have a documented audit trail.

These frameworks require that electrical systems and appliances supplied with a property are safe. PAT Testing is the recognised method of proving that compliance. In practice, many letting agents, insurers, and corporate landlords treat it as a must-do, not an optional extra.

Why It Matters

Tenant Safety – Electrical faults are a leading cause of domestic fires in the UK. A simple kettle test can prevent disaster.

Legal Protection – In the event of a claim, being able to show a dated certificate is often the difference between compliance and liability.

Reputation & Trust – Tenants and corporate occupiers value professionalism. A landlord who takes safety seriously stands out.

Portfolio Management – For large landlords or agents, PAT Testing reduces risk across dozens (or hundreds) of appliances.

How Often Should It Be Done?

The frequency depends on the environment, for Rental properties, best practice is every 12 months, especially if appliances are included in the tenancy. And for HMOs (Houses in Multiple Occupation) – Strongly advised annually, as tenant turnover and shared usage increase risk.

At Symple we know what a great PAT service looks like

To work with confidence, you need more than just a technician with a tester. Here’s what an excellent service should include.

It starts with a qualified Engineer being in attendance, this ensures tests are done properly, safely, and in compliance with latest standards. There needs to be a full Appliance Survey and Visual Inspection, this picks up on anything that needs to be actioned. An immediate digital report follows, giving stakeholders oversight and traceable and easily stored data. A safeguard during renewals, complaints, or regulatory checks.

Our remedial support means if something fails, the option to fix it fast is instantly there. Delays cost more, in risk and in reputation.

How it works – from Booking to Certificate

A great PAT Testing experience needs to be as streamlined as possible—here’s an ideal workflow. With Symple you click-to-Book, as online booking is done in under a minute. Then we handle access and liaison with tenant or keyholder so you don’t need to chase. Then the qualified professional visits and tests, appliance by appliance, identifying any failing items.

Then follows instant reporting, stakeholders get a digitally lodged certificate; if any items failed, a quote for remedial work appears too. Our service not only keeps you compliant; it practically removes the administrative burden. Less elevator-pitching, more peace of mind.

The Cost of Doing It Right

Real value comes when pricing is transparent. For many providers, PAT Testing is offered at a fixed, upfront price (plus VAT) for each property. What you pay covers the inspection, visual assessments, testing, and your warrantied report, stored in the cloud or your property dashboard. If there are failed appliances, the quote to fix those should be separate (so you won’t be surprised by hidden charges).

For Portfolios: Scaling Up Without the Stress

Managing one property is one thing; managing fifty or more brings complexity. We offer bulk onboarding so you can upload your property list, set reminders, handle renewals in one place. We give you dashboards — to track which properties are due for testing; when tests are booked and done; and view certificates at a glance.

Closing thoughts

PAT Testing is a preventative compliance measure. It gives landlords, agents, and property managers clear evidence that electrical appliances are safe. While not technically compulsory everywhere, it has become an industry standard—one that reduces risk, enhances safety, and provides a layer of legal and reputational protection. It is about making compliance symple, safety certain, and liability minimal.

 

Andrew Stanton Executive Editor – moving property and proptech forward. PropTech-X

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

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