A practical guide for landlords, tenants and agents navigating damp, mould, unsafe conditions, repair duties and rising compliance expectations across the rental sector.
Awaab’s Law has raised the bar on how quickly serious housing hazards must be addressed. While the law is currently in force for the social rented sector in England, it is already influencing expectations across the wider market. For landlords and agents, that means faster action and better record-keeping. For tenants, it means stronger awareness of what a safe home should look like.
Awaab’s Law was introduced after the death of Awaab Ishak and now imposes enforceable repair and investigation duties in the social rented sector in England. It is centred on urgent hazards, serious damp and mould, and faster action where health and safety are at risk. Even where the same rules do not yet directly apply, the message across the sector is clear: unsafe homes and slow responses are under much greater scrutiny.
The law creates fixed duties around investigation, communication and remedial action for qualifying hazards in social housing, setting a much firmer compliance benchmark for the wider sector.
Damp, mould and emergency hazards are treated as issues of safety and wellbeing, not just maintenance inconvenience. That shifts expectations for how quickly problems must be handled.
The government has already said Awaab’s Law will be extended to the private rented sector later, so private landlords and agents should be preparing now rather than waiting for the pressure to land all at once.
Where Awaab’s Law currently applies, the framework is built around urgency, written communication, and a clear expectation that serious hazards should not be allowed to drift unresolved.
Emergency hazards must be investigated quickly and made safe within 24 hours where required. This reflects the seriousness of immediate danger to occupiers.
Serious damp and mould hazards in scope must be investigated within a fixed window, helping stop delay, drift and repeated excuses where health may be affected.
Where a significant damp and mould hazard is confirmed, action to make the home safe must follow quickly, rather than being left open-ended or repeatedly deferred.
Even outside social housing, damp, mould and wider housing hazards already create real legal and commercial risk. Landlords and agents face growing scrutiny where complaints are mishandled, while tenants are increasingly aware of their rights when homes are left unsafe or unfit.
These are the kinds of problems that often escalate into complaints, enforcement issues, claims or serious reputational damage when they are not handled quickly and properly.
Especially around bedrooms, windows, cold corners, wardrobes and children’s sleeping areas.
Repeated moisture build-up, streaming windows and recurring damp despite routine cleaning.
Roof defects, penetrating damp, plumbing leaks or hidden moisture behind walls and floors.
Broken extractor fans, blocked vents or poor airflow that allows moisture to build up constantly.
Cold surfaces, patchy heating performance and structural conditions that encourage mould growth.
Respiratory symptoms, worsening asthma or concerns affecting children or vulnerable occupiers.
The safest and smartest approach is to act as if standards are only becoming tighter. Prompt investigation, professional communication and evidence-led action are now part of modern housing management.
Respond fast to reports, especially where children, vulnerability, visible mould or health concerns are involved.
Look beyond surface symptoms and check underlying causes such as leaks, insulation issues and extraction failure.
Record complaints, inspection dates, contractor input, decisions, works and all tenant communication.
Make sure the issue is actually fixed rather than cosmetically improved for a short period before returning again.
Use these routes to learn more, raise a matter properly, or obtain support through TLA if a hazard issue is becoming serious.
Review the government’s guidance on the current social housing framework, timeframes and phased approach.
Explore TLA’s broader legal support pathways for housing disputes, compliance concerns and document-based support.
For urgent property issues, live disputes or cases where you need help deciding the next step.
Send supporting photos, reports, correspondence and key documents to help structure the matter properly.
TLA can help landlords, tenants and agents take the next step with clearer guidance, stronger documentation and access to the right support route where a hazard issue is becoming serious or legally sensitive.
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