Renters’ Rights Act 2025: key changes for landlords

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 introduces major legal changes for private landlords in England.

Most of these changes come into force from 1 May 2026.

As a landlord in Newham, you are responsible for making sure your tenancies, property standards and letting practices comply with the new law.

This page explains the key changes and what they mean for you. It is general guidance only and not legal advice

Before 1 May 2026

From 1 May 2026

Section 21 could be used to evict tenants without reason

Section 21 abolished – use Section 8 with a legal ground

Most tenancies were fixed term (ASTs)

Most tenancies become assured periodic tenancies (no fixed end date)

Rent increases could be agreed at any time

Rent can usually only be increased once per year with 2 months’ notice

No set limits on rent in advance

Limits apply to rent in advance for new tenancies

Tenants could be asked to bid above advertised rent

Bidding wars banned – advertise and let at fixed price

You could refuse applicants with children or on benefits

Discrimination against these groups is now unlawful

Pets could be refused without explanation

Tenants can request pets – you must respond with a valid reason