13 mars 2026
Lending Focus - March 2026 – 2 de 5 Publications
The Renters' Rights Act 2025 (the Act) received Royal Assent on 27 October 2025, with its most significant reforms taking effect from 1 May 2026. The Act is far-reaching in scope. It offers significantly improved protection to tenants and lessens the certainty landlords, lenders and borrowers have historically relied upon in the private rental sector. Its measures are numerous and include the abolition and conversion of assured shorthold tenancies (ASTs) to periodic tenancies, restrictions on rent increases, the establishment of a new landlord database and the removal of a landlord's right to serve a "no fault" eviction notice on a tenant.
This legislative shift reshapes the assumptions upon which residential property-backed lending has historically been based and alters its risk profile, demanding a review and update of loan documentation. In this article, we explore each of the Act's provisions that impact real estate finance loans, and offer practical drafting advice for those operating in this sector.
From 1 May, any AST, whether new or existing, will be automatically converted into an assured periodic tenancy (AT). With certain exceptions, fixed-term tenancies will no longer be permitted.
The Act provides:
Removing tenancy end dates signifies a clear departure from how the real estate finance market has operated in recent decades in the private rental sector. Fixed-term ASTs afforded a degree of predictability, in the form of defined endpoints to landlords, enabling them to manage occupation. Lenders and borrower landlords were able to make clearer assumptions on continuity of income and of possession strategies. In contrast, periodic ATs are open-ended by design. Tenants may remain in occupation indefinitely, subject only to compliance with their obligations and the landlord establishing a statutory ground for possession.
Documentary considerations:
Section 21 of the Housing Act 1988 (HA 1988) allowed landlords to recover possession without establishing tenant fault, referred to as the "no fault" eviction procedure. This was often the most predictable and the fastest route to possession. From 1 May, this will be abolished, meaning possession can only be obtained by serving notice under section 8 HA 1988 or by relying on one or more statutory grounds in Schedule 2 of the HA 1988 (as amended by the Act).
Establishing section 8 grounds requires tenant breaches such as rent arrears, property damage, or antisocial behaviour but receiving an order for possession has often taken longer than the notice period a landlord might stipulate. The presence of non-performing tenants over a period of time can have a significant impact on the value of a lender's security and a borrower landlord's ability to service its debt efficiently.
Other section 8 grounds (such as sale of the property or landlord occupation) have mandatory minimum notice periods and restrictions on use (for example a 12-month "no eviction" period at the start of a tenancy for sale or occupation grounds).
Documentary considerations:
The Act establishes a new PRS Database which contains information about current and prospective residential landlords and dwellings. Both the property and the landlord of it must be registered before marketing that property for letting and adverts must reference the corresponding registration numbers. Landlords who are not registered will not be able to serve valid possession notices or rely on certain possession grounds, except on grounds 7A (criminal/anti-social behaviour) or 14 (nuisance or annoyance).
Lenders may, as part of their due diligence investigations into borrower landlords, now start to look at their track record in terms of compliance with the requirements of the PRS Database. Any failure to register correctly could affect the enforceability of lenders' security given a court may not make an order for possession.
Documentary considerations:
The Act requires all private landlords to be members of a new independent PRS Ombudsman scheme which will establish a complaints procedure against landlords by former, current and prospective tenants. It is important to note that its decisions may be enforced as if they were court orders, potentially resulting in impairment to cash flows from the borrower landlord and reputational risk on the part of the lender.
Documentary considerations:
The Act fundamentally changes how rent can be increased. Contractual review clauses will no longer be effective; rent can only be increased once per year and any increases require the use of a prescribed notice (the new section 13 notice procedure) with a minimum of two months' notice (replacing the one-month under the previous regime). Landlords cannot contract out of this mechanism.
Tenants will have the right to challenge proposed increases by the landlord at the First-tier Tribunal. Where a challenge is made, the increased rent is not payable unless and until the tribunal has determined the appropriate market rent. This may be determined to be lower than that proposed by the landlord, based on the tribunal's assessment of the applicable open-market rent, and the period required for determination is not yet clear.
Historically, lenders have relied on contractual rent review mechanisms to model income growth and serviceability, particularly in inflationary environments. The Act introduces a potential downward adjustment and removes a mechanism that landlords used to manage tenant risk and cash flows. For both lenders and borrower landlords, these changes necessitate a reassessment of representations, undertakings and financial covenants. Income projections will need to reflect the possibility of frozen or reduced (rather than upward-only) rents during tribunal proceedings and the inability to accelerate cash inflows through advance payments, as discussed further below.
Documentary considerations:
The Act restricts landlords from requiring more than one month's rent in advance and caps tenancy deposits. It also prohibits "bidding wars" for rental properties. This again strikes at the predictability of rental income.
Documentary considerations
The Act makes great progress in restricting discrimination against tenants with children and those in receipt of benefits, gives tenants a statutory right to request permission to keep a pet and extends the Decent Homes Standard (regarding minimum property condition standards). A lender will want to ensure a borrower landlord is in compliance generally, and will also note the potential effect of non-compliance on the value of its security.
Documentary considerations:
A few additional considerations apply to lenders to borrower-landlords with portfolios of buy-to-let properties as security:
The Act recognises that student housing operates differently from the wider private rented sector. PBSAs have therefore been carved out from certain aspects of the assured tenancy regime, but the position is more nuanced than a blanket exemption. For lenders and developers active in the PBSA market, the Act introduces both reassurance and risk, depending on how assets are structured and operated in practice.
University owned accommodation and student licences will remain outside the scope of the Act. PBSA providers who are members of government-approved codes of practice such as the ANUK/Unipol code will largely sidestep the tenure reforms. They will be able to grant common law tenancies rather than assured periodic tenancies (APTs), allowing them to continue offering fixed-term agreements aligned with the academic year and to require advance rent payments.
However, this exemption only applies to new tenancies granted after the changes come into force on 1 May 2026. Existing ASTs will undergo a transitional period, converting to APTs until they can be ended through either Section 21 notices (issued before implementation) or the new Ground 4A possession proceedings, but time is tight for such a change to be made prior to 1 May.
The Act introduces a variety of enforcement mechanisms and civil penalties for breaches and offences. The Local Housing Authorities will bear the onus of this under statutory duties to take action against landlords. The majority of the breaches will result in a civil penalty of up to £7,000 for initial non-compliance but repeated breaches or offences can result in civil penalties of up to £40,000. Further, there is scope for criminal prosecution including summary conviction or a fine, depending on the severity of non-compliance. The negative consequences of this for a borrower-landlord and their lender are self-evident.
The Act represents the most significant reform to the private rental sector in a generation, with consequences that extend well beyond the landlord and tenant relationship and into the heart of real estate finance. Lenders and borrower landlords are advised to act promptly to review and update their loan documentation to reflect the new legislative landscape.
To discuss the issues raised in this article in more detail, please contact a member of our Banking and Finance team in London.
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