You may remember that on 1 October 2015, new rules regarding the use of section 21 came into force for assured shorthold tenancies which started or were renewed on or after that date.
From today, in England (the changes do not affect properties in Wales) those rules (or most of them) apply to ALL ASTs.
Let’s have a quick look at them. But first
What is section 21?
There are as many section 21s as there are acts of Parliament which have 21 or more sections. However, in a housing law context, section 21 is section 21 of the Housing Act 1988.
This is the section which provides that so long as a landlord complies with the rules, he can obtain a possession order in court even if the tenant has done nothing wrong.
These are the rules which already existed:
- The tenancy must be an assured shorthold tenancy
- The landlord must serve a notice first (known as a section 21 notice)
- For the notice to be valid, the landlord must be compliant with the tenancy deposit rules (if he has taken a deposit) and
- Obtained an HMO license (if the property is subject to licensing)
- The landlord must also give the correct notice period – which cannot be less than two months from the date of service of the notice, and
- The proceedings cannot start until after the end of the fixed term (although you can serve the notice during the fixed term)
The good news
The rule which said that for some notices you have to give a date which is the last day of a period of the tenancy has now gone. You just need to give two months notice (or whatever notice period is applicable for your tenancy).
We have a prescribed form. It is called Form 6a and must be used now for all ASTs.
I say this is good news as having a prescribed form generally means that fewer mistakes are made. Provided you use the form of course.
The new section 21 pre-requisites
These are as follows:
- You must have served the government’s ‘How to Rent’ booklet – which can be found online here.
- You must have served a gas safety certificate on the tenants before they moved in and
- An energy performance certificate
Although it looks as if the last two only apply to post 30 September 2015 tenancies. There is a particular problem about the Gas Safety Certificates which you can read about here.
The anti-retaliatory eviction rules
These say (more or less) that you can’t serve a section 21 notice within six months after service of the following by your Local Authority:
(a) a notice served under section 11 of the Housing Act 2004 (improvement notices relating to category 1 hazards),
(b) a notice served under section 12 of that Act (improvement notices relating to category 2 hazards), or
(c) a notice served under section 40(7) of that Act (emergency remedial action);
If you have already served a section 21 notice and it was served after your tenants complained about something referred to in the Local Authority notice – your section 21 notice will be retrospectively invalidated. Unless you have already obtained your possession order.
For most landlords, the anti-retaliatory rules will not be a problem as Local Authority Environmental Health Officers (EHOs)are not going to serve an improvement notice unless there is a serious problem. In most cases even then they won’t serve a notice until they have tried to resolve matters amicably with you first.
So if you are contacted by a Local Authority EHO about a problem with your property – try to deal with it promptly.
The time limits
You can’t serve a section 21 notice during the initial first four months of a tenancy (or rather you can but it won’t be valid). As a section 21 notice must give a notice period of at least two months, this means that even if you have a very short tenancy you can’t use section 21 to evict the tenant until after the first six months.
We also now have ‘use it or lose it’ rules:
- In most cases, you can’t issue proceedings based on a section 21 notice which was served more than six months ago.
- If the notice is one which has a notice period of more than two months, then you can’t issue proceedings after four months from the date given in the notice.
Summing up
Most landlords will (or should) be aware of these rules and be applying them. They have been around for the past three years after all.
They may be a problem though for landlords with only one or a few properties where they have had the same tenants for over three years. In particular – that section 21 notice you served at the start of the tenancy is no longer valid.
If you can’t remember whether you served you gas safety certificate – that’s not a problem as those rules do not apply to you. Unless you give the tenants a new tenancy agreement or renewal form.
So in view of the problem discussed here, I suggest that if you can’t prove service of your gas safety certificate you allow the tenancy to run on as a periodic. As otherwise, you may find that you are stuck with your tenants forever.
In the paragraph under The Good News, you seem to suggest that the notice period could be less than six months…?
Could you elaborate on your last two bullet points? What is the reason for the last one?
When can you action an S21 issued more than six months ago?
You can’t. Those are the two situations. This is the statute: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/20/section/36/enacted
(4D) Subject to subsection (4E), proceedings for an order for possession under this section in relation to a dwelling-house in England may not be begun after the end of the period of six months beginning with the date on which the notice was given under subsection (1) or (4).
(4E) Where—
(a) a notice under subsection (4) has been given in relation to a dwelling-house in England, and
(b) paragraph (b) of that subsection requires the date specified in the notice to be more than two months after the date the notice was given,proceedings for an order for possession under this section may not be begun after the end of the period of four months beginning with the date specified in the notice.”
So, “in most cases”, or never?
“If the notice is one which has a notice period of more than two months, then you can’t issue proceedings after four months from the date given in the notice.”
Why is this?
Also, the notice period can’t be less than 2 months with an AST, can it?
Any tenants reading should take some comfort in all this, and always (always!) check any section 21 they receive is even valid. Citizens Advice knocked up a helpful tool for that:
https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/housing/renting-privately/during-your-tenancy/if-you-get-a-section-21-notice/
If it isn’t valid then definitely get advice from Shelter on challenging it. There are pros and cons to doing that. Page 9 of this guide from Advice Now elaborates (note: this is written before the recent changes and yet to be updated)
https://www.advicenow.org.uk/guides/how-deal-section-21-eviction-notice
Plenty of incompetent landlords, and judges sadly.
https://landlordlawblog.co.uk/2016/05/24/judges-making-mistakes-possession-orders-massive-scale/
Please be warned it should not be but does happen. Tenants can contact council after Section 21 is issued even if they have not contacted the Landlord before. What happens next can get the process elongated even if they are not speaking the truth.
Late to the party here for commenting but I just wondered if this scenario could be given guidance on? If another post covers this sorry I cannot see one.
1. The tenancy initially began before 01/10/2015
2. It was renewed after 01/10/2015 (gas cert, EPC and HTRGuide given when renewed)
3. But no gas certificate was given prior to occupation (was in place but cannot proved not given prior)
Am I now bound by new rules even though previous tenancy where did not give gas cert in time was before new rules in?
I have searched high and low to find this out but nada!
Thanks :-)
It is not 100% certain and we need a test case. But my feeling is that you will be in difficulties.
I am recommending that landlords of pre 1/10/2015 tenancies who cannot prove that they served a gas safety certificate before the tenants moved in, allow the tenancy to run on as a periodic. At least until the law is clarified.
Thanks for your reply, its appreciated. Looks like a problem for several of my tenancies then! :-(
Sorry! But keep an eye on the landlord and tenant news press as the rule may be changed if there is a court case which goes to the Court of Appeal, or the Supreme Court.