What local landlords need to know about the biggest rental reform in a generation
The Renters Reform Bill is a major overhaul of private rental laws in England, and it's expected to come into force in 2025. It will affect every landlord—especially those operating in cities like Newcastle, where student lets, HMOs, and buy-to-lets make up a significant part of the housing market.
Why it matters:
This isn’t just policy—it changes how landlords select tenants, manage properties, and handle evictions. For Newcastle landlords, being unprepared could mean legal risks, loss of income, or trouble regaining possession of properties.
What’s changing: Landlords will no longer be able to evict tenants without a reason.
Why it matters in Newcastle:
With a large student and young professional tenant base, many landlords rely on fixed terms and flexibility. The removal of Section 21 means you’ll need valid grounds (like rent arrears or breach of tenancy) and evidence to repossess.
The grounds under Section 8 will be expanded to include new reasons like repeated rent arrears and a landlord’s intention to sell or move in.
Tip: Start documenting issues thoroughly—this paper trail will be essential if legal proceedings are needed.
All new tenancies will be open-ended. Fixed-term contracts will be a thing of the past.
What to do:
Prepare for longer-term tenants and rethink your letting calendar, especially if you operate near Newcastle University or manage short academic tenancies.
A digital register for all landlords and their properties will become mandatory.
Why it matters:
This aims to improve transparency and enforcement. If your Newcastle property isn’t registered, you may face penalties.
Tenants will be able to raise complaints through a new ombudsman—who can impose legally binding resolutions.
Landlord tip:
Improve tenant communication and response times now. Avoidable disputes may become legal headaches later.
Are your tenancy agreements up to date?
Are you serving all the correct documents (EPC, How to Rent, gas safety)?
Have you protected all deposits correctly under an approved scheme?
Why it matters:
Compliance gaps could undermine your legal position under the new system.
Log all maintenance requests
Offer clear and timely communication
Treat tenants like long-term customers, not short-term lodgers
This approach helps protect your reputation and may even prevent complaints being escalated to the new ombudsman.
If your strategy relied heavily on short-term tenancies (e.g. students), consider branching into:
Mid-term lets for professionals
Family rentals in areas like Gosforth or Jesmond
Serviced accommodation where permitted
Relying on outdated tenancy templates
Not preparing for longer tenancies
Failing to understand the new grounds for eviction
Ignoring energy efficiency—EPC rules are tightening too
Action step: Speak with a letting agent or legal advisor now, before the bill comes into force.
The Renters Reform Bill is coming—and landlords in Newcastle who prepare now will be in the best position to thrive. This is more than compliance; it’s about building resilient, tenant-friendly businesses that hold value in a changing regulatory landscape.
If you need expert support with letting, tenant communication, and compliance in Newcastle, Pass the Keys can help you manage everything from bookings to legal obligations—while still maximising income.