Renters’ Rights Bill Will Fail Without Proper Plan for Enforcement

Reforms to the private rented sector will fail without a proper plan to improve enforcement against rogue and criminal landlords.

That’s the warning from the body representing responsible landlords as Peers prepare to debate the detail of the Renters’ Rights Bill.

The Bill includes major changes which councils will need to enforce. This includes a decent homes standard for the sector, measures to tackle dangerous damp and mould in homes, and the development of a new database of private rented housing.

In a report published today the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) points to the pressures councils are already under even before the Bill is implemented.

Freedom of Information data shows that less than half of all fines levied against rogue landlords in England were collected between 2021 and 2023. Meanwhile, 49 per cent of English councils had failed to issue a single fine against a rogue landlord during this time.

The Renters’ Rights Bill comes amidst a backdrop of one in four councils in England saying they will likely have to apply for emergency Government bailouts to stave off bankruptcy.

Councils are also being expected to do more at a time when many are already struggling to cope with the impact of reforms to the way they are organised, pressures to get more homes built, and the ongoing crisis in the adult social care system.

The NRLA is warning that councils will struggle to provide the time, focus or resources needed to enforce the Bill and tackle the minority of landlords bringing the sector into disrepute.

To address this, the NRLA is calling for:

· The Government to publish a full assessment of the resources local authority enforcement teams currently have, and will need, to enforce what is proposed in the Renters’ Rights Bill.

· Councils to be required to publish an annual report on enforcement activity related to the private rented sector.

· Measures to prevent duplication of efforts between the planned database of private sector landlords and properties and local landlord licensing schemes.

· The development of a new national post of Chief Environmental Health Officer to champion better enforcement.

 

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the National Residential Landlords Association, said:

“For too long the vast majority of decent, responsible landlords have been tarnished by the actions of a minority of rogue operators failing to provide good enough housing.

“If planned reforms are to work, councils need to up their game at finding and rooting out those who have no place renting property out and making it easier for the law-abiding majority providing decent and safe homes.

“Our report today suggests local authorities will struggle to enforce much of what is in the Renters’ Rights Bill.

“Without further action, the only winners from all this will be the minority of unscrupulous landlords.”

EAN Content

Content shared by this account is either news shared free by third parties or sponsored (paid for) content from third parties. Please be advised that links to third party websites are not endorsed by Estate Agent Networking - Please do your own research before committing to any third party business promoted on our website. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

You May Also Enjoy

Letting Agent Talk

Will RRA mean almost 50% of renters need a guarantor?

A surge in tenants who require a rent guarantor is coming to the post-RRA rental market   New analysis by Zero Deposit reveals that the proportion of local authority districts in which the average tenant is likely to need a rent guarantor to secure pass tenancy affordability checks could increase from one-in-five to almost one-in-two…
Read More
Breaking News

Nationwide House Price Index for May 2026 – Thoughts from the Industry

The latest Nationwide House Price Index for May 2026 shows that: House prices fell by -0.6% between April 2026 and May 2026. This marks the first monthly decline recorded so far this year. Annual house price growth slowed to 1.7% in May 2026, down from 3.0% in April 2026. The average UK house price now…
Read More
Breaking News

Annual house price growth slows in May

UK annual house price growth slowed to 1.7% in May, from 3.0% in April House prices were down 0.6% month on month   Headlines May-26 Apr-26 Monthly Index* 551.0 554.3 Monthly Change* -0.6% 0.4% Annual Change 1.7% 3.0% Average Price (not seasonally adjusted) £278,024 £278,880 * Seasonally adjusted figure (note that monthly % changes are…
Read More
Home and Living

Signs of Outdated Wiring in Older Tulsa-Area Homes

Tulsa has a lot of beautiful older homes. Brookside bungalows, Maple Ridge tudors, the postwar neighborhoods that fill out Midtown and East Tulsa. They were built well, but most were built before central air, before microwaves, before two-car households with two laptops and a dozen phone chargers. The electrical systems inside them were designed for…
Read More
LIVING BY THE SEASIDE 2022
Breaking News

Britain’s seaside price hotspots revealed

New analysis from the UK’s largest property platform Rightmove reveals Britain’s seaside hotspots where prices are rising the fastest Bootle in Merseyside leads the way, with average asking prices up 11% year-on-year, followed by Crosby in Liverpool (+9%) and Penarth in South Glamorgan (+9%) Other coastal locations including Llantwit Major in South Glamorgan (+8%) and Llanelli, in Carmarthenshire (+7%) are also seeing strong price growth Average asking prices are currently 0.3% lower in Great Britain compared to last year, with some seaside hotspots outpacing the…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Hertfordshire emerges as strongest performing London commuter county

New research from UK Property Development reveals that while London property prices fell by more than -3% in the past year, prices in some of the capital’s surrounding counties have enjoyed positive growth, none more so than the premium commuter county of Hertfordshire.   In the past year, London’s average house price has fallen by…
Read More