• 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

Tenant cancelling agreed early surrender – what are the landlords options?

This post is more than 11 years old

April 28, 2014 by Tessa Shepperson

flatsHere is a question to the blog clinic from Michael who is a landlord:

I granted a 12 month AST from 1st Dec 2013, with mutual rights to terminate after 6 months i.e at 31st May 2014.

The tenant advised in mid March they he had to return to Italy for urgent family reasons and sought to terminate the tenancy at the end of March – that is with little over 2 weeks’ notice and emailed me to this effect.

I indicated that although I was not obliged to allow termination before the end of May. I was prepared to allow it, provided there was a minimum month’s notice with the end date 15th April. The tenant emailed and confirmed this was acceptable.

On 15th April, the tenant then advised that he wished to stay until the 20th, and just before the 20th he requested a further week.

The tenant now advises that he may not need to go to Italy and would wish to stay on until the Dec 2014 end date.

If this is the case, can I request the tenant to formally withdraw his previous notices and confirm that he wishes to continue with the existing tenancy OR do I need to set up a new tenancy?

Rent is currently paid up to the end of April.

I don’t think it is necessary to set up a new tenancy.

My view is that you should just continue with the existing tenancy as if nothing had happened. You agreed to a surrender but then it was mutually withdrawn.

So just email the tenant and say that if this is what they wish then you will treat the agreement to end early as if it never happened.

After all so long as they are in the property, looking after it and paying rent – thats what you want!

But maybe just ask the tenant to confirm formally, for the record, that he will now be staying on as originally intended and that he now no longer wishes to leave early.

Previous Post
Next Post

Filed Under: Clinic

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. Jamie says

    April 28, 2014 at 3:43 pm

    We frequently have tenants retracting notices and we deal with it exactly as Tessa has suggested, i.e. summarise what has been agreed in an email and ask the tenant for their agreement via email, then just let the tenancy carry on.

    It’s a pain but quite common. The main thing is that you still have rent coming in.

    The really awkward situation arises when the tenant wants to retract their notice but the landlord has other ideas!

Primary Sidebar

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

Post updates

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

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