• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About
  • My Services
  • Training and Events
  • Landlord Law
Landlord Law Blog

The Landlord Law Blog

Interesting posts on residential landlord & tenant law and practice In England & Wales UK

  • Home
  • Posts
  • News
    & comment
  • Analysis
  • Cases
  • Tips &
    How to
  • Tenants
  • Clinic
    • Ask your question
    • Clinic replies
    • Blog Clinic Fast Track
  • Series
    • Renters Rights Act 2025
    • Renters Rights Bill
    • Election 2024
    • Audios
    • Urban Myths
    • New Welsh Laws
    • Local Authority Help for ‘Green improvements’ to property
    • The end of s21 – Protecting your position
    • End of Section 21
    • Should law and justice be free?
    • Grounds for Eviction
    • HMO Basics

Tenancy deposits – what you need to do NOW! Or risk being fined

This post is more than 14 years old

April 4, 2012 by Tessa Shepperson

Follow the tenancy deposit rulesIf you have been reading the landlord press you cannot have failed to notice that there is something happening with the tenancy deposit regulations.

I daresay though that many landlords will have skimmed this thinking that it does not apply to them for some reason.

Don’t do this or you may get caught out!

Here’s what you need to do:

1. Make a list of all the tenancy deposits you have taken for tenancies which have not ended yet

For some landlords this will be a short list!  For others it may take a while to work it out.

However do this, as then it will be easier for you to check your position.

2. Check your records for each and every tenancy to see if it has been protected

It might be an idea too, to write down the tenancy deposit scheme you have used for each deposit.

Hunt out the paperwork and forms (to make sure you still have them) and keep them carefully.

3. For every deposit that has been protected, check to see if you have served the prescribed information

This needs to be done AS WELL as protecting the deposit.

  • If you have protected with TDS or  Deposit Guard you should have been sent a form you can use.
  • If you have protected with the DPS you will find a template on their website here
  • If you have protected with My Deposits you will find detailed guidance on what you need to do here (this is a pdf document)

If you have served the information, make sure you can prove this if challenged.  If there is any doubt, serve it again, just to be on the safe side.

If you have not served it, DO IT NOW!

If you are serving the information now, make sure you keep proper records so you can prove that you have done this, if challenged.

4. If you have not protected the deposit, write down why

If it is because you forgot, then DO IT NOW! And serve the prescribed information.

If it is because the tenancy is not an AST, check to see whether it is likely to turn into an AST at any time in the future.  If so, it might be worth protecting now anyway, just to be on the safe side.

Note – if you did not protect the deposit because the rent was over £25,000 and the tenancy was not an AST – this changed in October 2010 and the tenancy IS now an AST.  So you need to protect the deposit ASAP.

Deposits taken from lodgers by the way, do not need to be protected as lodgers cannot be assured shorthold tenants.

If it is because you took the deposit before 7 April 2007, ie before the rules came into effect so it is exempt, consider protecting now anyway – there is an outside chance that the wording of the new rules may cover older deposits.

These last two points were raised by solicitor David Smith in his blog post here.

Note also that, for pre 2007 deposits, if you have given the tenant a new tenancy since 2007 the deposit should have been protected at that time.  So if it wasn’t, do it now.  And serve the prescribed information.

Why do you need to do all this now?

Because the new regulations are retrospective and will apply to existing deposits (save possibly pre 2007 deposits and those for non ASTs).  AND the rules are being tightened up, so that you will no longer have the option to avoid claims by protecting out of time.

So if the tenant brings a claim for the penalty payment for default – you will have no defence.

When the new rules come into force on 6 April, there will be a 30 day grace period for landlords to protect old deposits, which will last until 6 May.  Make sure you get all relevant deposits protected by then!

You have been warned.

*****

Note – I have been provided with a very interesting pdf by David d’Orton-Gibson of www.lettingnetwork.com which you can read here.  This gives a lot more detail about the changes in the tenancy deposit scheme and the effect this will have on landlords and agents.

Previous Post
Next Post

Filed Under: News and comment, Tips and How to Tagged With: tenancy deposits

Notes:

Please check the date of the post - remember, if it is an old post, the law may have changed since it was written.

You should always get independent legal advice before taking any action.

Reader Interactions

Please read our terms of use and comments policy. Comments close after three months

Comments

  1. Muckypuppyuk says

    April 4, 2012 at 4:22 pm

    I have made a major mistake and did not hold my tenants deposit. I have just issued a section 21 as the tenancy ended two months ago and have just read that it wont stand up in court. Can I put the deposit in the DPS now? would it help? I just forgot and it has been sat in a bank account so feel really stupid now. I have never rented before and was only doing it whilst working away and regret it. The tenant was very friendly and we had a great relationship but the last few weeks I have been trying to get access for the first time to do gas and electricity checks done and she is ignoring me on all forms of communication. I am stuck. What can I do?

  2. Tessa Shepperson says

    April 4, 2012 at 4:26 pm

    Protect the deposit with the DPS NOW!! YOu can do it all online.

    Then serve the prescribed information on the tenant.

    Then you will be safe and will be able to serve a new section 21 notice.

    It is important that you do not delay with this, due to these new regulations coming out. However, don’t panic, so long as you protect and serve the notice ASAP you will be OK. (Although, as I said, you will need to serve a new section 21 notice).

  3. Jamie says

    April 4, 2012 at 5:36 pm

    Checking you have served the prescribed information may be little ticky as the prescribed information has changed over time.

  4. Tessa Shepperson says

    April 4, 2012 at 5:48 pm

    So far as I am aware, the regulations themsevles have not changed though: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2007/797/made

  5. Ben Reeve-Lewis says

    April 5, 2012 at 8:59 am

    Tessa you mention that out of time payments are going to be out from from May though

  6. Tessa Shepperson says

    April 5, 2012 at 10:01 am

    They can always protect out of time. But (so we understand) that won’t protect landlords from a claim by tenants for the penalty.

    So if landlords want to avoid being sued for the penalty they need to protect within the 30 days.

  7. Ben Reeve-Lewis says

    April 5, 2012 at 10:15 am

    Oh yeah I see, I read it out of context. Thought I hadnt heard of that one.

    We are getting ready for a rash of claims in our office, all staff informed and geared up and I doubt we will be the only ones.

    The reason being this:-
    No deposit protection means invalid section 21 = homelessness team defeats possession claim and prevents homelessness which does out stats a power of good.

    Also, If we assist tenant to claim the penalty they have enough money to get their own place and we dont have to spend any money.

    Landlords really need to bear this in mind at this time. Its hunting season I’m afraid

  8. JS says

    April 10, 2012 at 9:07 pm

    Ben, I’m pretty sure “ability to afford own private rented tenancy” doesn’t mean they aren’t homeless, eligible, in priority need, and not intentionally homeless?

  9. Terry says

    May 1, 2012 at 9:00 pm

    Why are people still taking old fashioned, pain in the neck deposits?

    I decided a long time ago that the best way forward was to forget deposits (I’m not on a Government deposit list!) and take a legal administration fee of around £250 per property (a form of self insurance over many properties) and cover a tenancy with an older relative guarantor, who has considerably less rights in law than the tenant.

    I have never had a dispute (I usually ignore any end of tenancy fees up to £250 – there’s a surprise!). Anything above this and guarantors know that if they do not ‘encourage’ (no landlord harassment here) the tenant to pay outstanding end of tenancy fees then the guarantor potentially stands to loose their creditworthiness in court!

    Landlords need to start to think laterally!

    The tenancy deposit schemes are not on our side, because landlords generally do not provide sufficient evidence.

    Remember deposits are the tenant’s money, but a legal administration fee is the landlord’s money! Guarantors also do not generally want to be taken to court!

Primary Sidebar

Sign up to the Landlord Law mailing list and get a free pet form
Sign up

Post updates

Never miss another post!
Sign up to our Post Updates or the monthly Round Up
Sign up
Landlord Law Findamentals

Worried about insurance?

Insurance Course

Sign up to the Landlord Law mailing list

And get a free eBook

Sign up

Footer

Disclaimer

The purpose of this blog is to provide information, comment and discussion.

Please, when reading, always check the date of the post. Be careful about reading older posts as the law may have changed since they were written.

Note that although we may, from time to time, give helpful comments to readers’ questions, these can only be based on the information given by the reader in his or her comment, which may not contain all material facts.

Any comments or suggestions provided by Tessa or any guest bloggers should not, therefore be relied upon as a substitute for legal advice from a qualified lawyer regarding any actual legal issue or dispute.

Nothing on this website should be construed as legal advice or perceived as creating a lawyer-client relationship (apart from the Fast Track block clinic service – so far as the questioners only are concerned).

Please also note that any opinion expressed by a guest blogger is his or hers alone, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Tessa Shepperson, or the other writers on this blog.

Note that we do not accept any unsolicited guest blogs, so please do not ask. Neither do we accept advertising or paid links.

Cookies

You can find out more about our use of 'cookies' on this website here.

Other sites

Landlord Law
The Renters Guide
Lodger Landlord
Your Law Store

Legal

Landlord Law Blog is © 2006 – 2025 Tessa Shepperson

Note that Tessa is an introducer for Alan Boswell Insurance Brokers and will get a commission from sales made via links on this website.

Property Investor Bureau The Landlord Law Blog


Copyright © 2026 · Log in · Privacy | Contact | Comments Policy