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Illegal Activity by Tenants – Are You Covered?

Illegal Activity by Tenants – Are You Covered?

Discovering that tenants have used a rental property for illegal activity presents significant challenges for landlords, including property damage, loss of income, and potential legal issues. Understanding how landlord insurance policies respond to such situations is crucial, as coverage often depends on policy wording, disclosure, and adherence to inspection requirements.

Common Types of Illegal Activity in Rental Properties

Landlords may encounter various forms of illegal activity within their properties, each carrying distinct risks and implications:

  • Cannabis farms – These can cause extensive damage such as tampered electrics, water damage, mould, and structural weakening due to extraction systems.
  • Subletting and unlicensed HMOs – Operating without proper licensing breaches licence conditions and fire safety regulations, increasing liability risks.
  • Fraudulent use – Properties may be used by tenants for identity fraud or illegal business activities, exposing landlords to reputational and legal risks.
  • Anti-social behaviour – Activities such as drug dealing or disorderly conduct can harm the landlord’s reputation and affect neighbouring residents.

How Insurers Typically Respond

Most standard landlord insurance policies explicitly exclude damage or liability arising from illegal tenant activity. However, some specialist insurers may cover malicious damage caused by tenants involved in illegal use, provided landlords can demonstrate they took reasonable precautions and complied with inspection requirements. The success of a claim often depends on the quality of evidence presented.

Inspection Requirements

To mitigate risks, insurers commonly require landlords to conduct regular documented inspections. Typical conditions include:

  • Inspections every three months, with some insurers demanding checks every six to twelve weeks.
  • Maintaining written logs and, ideally, date-stamped photographs as evidence.
  • Promptly reporting any concerns to insurers or relevant authorities.

Failure to meet these inspection obligations can result in insurers declining claims on the basis that policy conditions were not fulfilled.

Malicious Damage Coverage

Where illegal activity leads to deliberate property damage, some insurance policies include an extension for malicious damage by tenants. This cover is not standard and must be explicitly included in the policy. Even with this extension, insurers may refuse claims if landlords have not exercised adequate tenant screening or inspection diligence.

Loss of Rent – Areas of Uncertainty

Loss of rent cover typically applies following insured perils such as fire or flood. It rarely extends to situations where tenants are evicted due to illegal activity. Some specialist policies may cover loss of rent after police closure or malicious damage, but this is uncommon. Landlords should not assume rent will continue if a property becomes uninhabitable due to illegal tenant activity.

Practical Steps for Landlords

Landlords can reduce their exposure to risks associated with illegal tenant activity by adopting the following practices:

  • Conduct robust tenant referencing and thorough identity checks.
  • Perform regular inspections and maintain detailed records.
  • Be alert to warning signs such as covered windows, unusual condensation, tampered electrics, or neighbour complaints.
  • Ensure insurance policies explicitly include malicious damage by tenants if this protection is desired.
  • Notify insurers promptly if the property’s use changes, for example, becoming an HMO, to avoid non-disclosure issues.

Case Example

One landlord found that tenants had converted a three-bedroom semi-detached house into a cannabis farm. The electrics had been bypassed, creating a fire risk, and the property suffered from severe condensation and mould. The insurer initially declined the claim citing the illegal activity exclusion. However, because the landlord provided quarterly inspection records showing no prior signs until the last month, the insurer agreed to cover malicious damage repairs, though not loss of rent. This case emphasises the importance of evidence and compliance with inspection requirements.

Final Thoughts

Illegal activity within rental properties poses serious challenges for landlords. Selecting the right insurance policy and maintaining strong inspection and tenant referencing records are essential to managing these risks. Landlords should not assume that standard landlord insurance covers malicious damage or loss of rent following illegal activity; careful review of policy wording and consultation with a specialist broker is advisable.

Upcoming TLA Initiative

The Landlord Association (TLA) is launching a new Trusted Partners Hub in the first quarter of 2026. This platform will feature verified and approved service providers selected to support landlords, tenants, and property management businesses. Legal, trades, insurance, financial, mortgage, tenant screening, and other service providers interested in joining can register their interest at https://landlordassociation.org.uk/become-a-tla-service-partner/.

Source: www.property118.com

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