A recent Freedom of Information request has revealed that many landlords in England may not meet the 31 May deadline to provide tenants with the mandatory Renters’ Rights Act information sheet. Despite 153,000 downloads of the official document within the first four weeks of its release, this figure falls short when compared to the estimated 2.3 million private landlords required to distribute it.
Low Engagement with Mandatory Compliance Material
The data, obtained by Landlord Studio from the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government, highlights a significant challenge in the rollout of the Renters’ Rights Act. The Act mandates that landlords must serve tenants with an official information sheet by the end of May, failure to do so risking penalties of up to £7,000 per tenancy.
Landlord Studio’s co-founder, Logan Ransley, commented on the findings: “The findings shine a light on a rollout challenge when it comes to the Renters’ Rights Act. Even allowing for reuse across portfolios, engagement with the official document looks low compared with the size of the private rented sector.”
He further explained that the property sector is not uniform in its approach to compliance. “Some landlords already have systems in place for managing compliance and others don’t, relying on more manual or informal processes. When you introduce something like this on a fixed deadline, it doesn’t land in the same way for everyone.”
Uneven Compliance Across the Sector
The Freedom of Information response also showed 189,000 sessions on the government’s Renters’ Rights Act webpage during the same four-week period. This suggests that not every visitor proceeded to download the official information sheet, indicating varying levels of engagement.
Letting agents may account for some of this discrepancy, as a single download could be used across multiple landlord clients or portfolios. Nonetheless, Landlord Studio interprets the figures as evidence that direct engagement with the compliance material has been inconsistent ahead of the deadline.
What this means for landlords
With the 31 May deadline fast approaching, landlords must ensure they not only provide the required information sheet to tenants but also maintain evidence of compliance. Failure to do so could result in substantial fines, which may impact profitability and landlord reputations.
Given the uneven uptake revealed by the data, landlords who have yet to engage with the Renters’ Rights Act materials should prioritise compliance immediately. Establishing clear processes to distribute the information and retain proof will be essential to avoid penalties.
Source: Based on reporting from Property118
TLA Training Academy
The Landlord Association has launched its new Training Academy for UK landlords, providing structured guidance, compliance education, and practical knowledge to support landlords at every stage. Members can now complete the programme and become TLA Certified Landlords at no additional cost as part of their membership.
Landlords can explore the Academy here: https://landlordassociation.org.uk/tla-academy/
Those looking to join and access the full training and certification can register here: https://landlordassociation.org.uk/landlord-association-membership-uk/
TLA update
The Landlord Association is currently onboarding new service providers into its Trusted Partner Hub, a new initiative designed to support landlords, tenants, letting agents, and property managers with vetted, high-quality services. As one of the fastest growing landlord associations in the UK, TLA offers partners direct access to an engaged and active member base at the point of need. Service providers across legal, maintenance, insurance, finance, mortgages, tenant screening, and property services can register their interest here: https://landlordassociation.org.uk/become-a-tla-service-partner/
Source: www.property118.com

