Introduction

The Renters’ Rights Act represents one of the most significant overhauls to the private rental sector in decades.

For landlords across England, this is not a minor regulatory tweak — it fundamentally changes how tenancies are structured, managed, and ended.

If you don’t understand these changes properly, you are exposed.

Section 21 Has Been Abolished

The removal of Section 21 means landlords can no longer evict tenants without providing a legal reason.

This shifts the balance significantly.

What this means in reality:

This is where weak processes will get punished.

Fixed-Term Tenancies Are Being Replaced

Traditional fixed-term agreements are being phased out in favour of rolling periodic tenancies.

Impact:

This makes stability harder to manage unless you’re running a structured system.

Rent Increases Are Now More Controlled

Rent increases must follow a formal process and be justifiable.

Key points:

If you’ve been “winging it” with rent reviews, that’s over.

Tenants Can Request Pets

Tenants now have the right to request pets, and landlords cannot unreasonably refuse.

What this actually means:

Handled badly = risk
Handled properly = not an issue

Compliance Is No Longer Optional

The legislation increases expectations around compliance and documentation.

This includes:

Sloppy management will cost you — either in delays, disputes, or lost income.

What Should Landlords Do Now?

Don’t sit back and wait — landlords who don’t adapt will get caught out.

Immediate steps:

How Easymove Supports You

At Easymove, we already operate in line with these changes across our managed portfolio in East London.

We help landlords:

Final Thoughts

The Renters’ Rights Act isn’t just another update — it’s a structural shift in the lettings market.

Landlords who adapt early will stay in control.

Those who don’t will feel it — in disputes, delays, and reduced returns.