The Renters’ Rights Act 2025

A Turning Point for Property Investors

The Residential Landscape Is Shifting

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 is the most significant overhaul of England’s private rental sector in a generation. Its core provisions take effect from 1 May 2026, and they will fundamentally alter the risk profile, management burden, and return dynamics of residential investment.

For investors with residential holdings — or those who have been weighing residential against other asset classes — this is a moment to reassess.

What the Act Actually Does

The end of no-fault eviction

Section 21 — the mechanism that allowed landlords to recover possession without giving a reason — is abolished from 1 May 2026. Possession will only be available through the evidence-based Section 8 route, requiring landlords to cite a specific statutory ground (such as rent arrears, sale of property, or owner-occupation) and meet a growing evidential burden in court.

With courts already operating at a median of 27 weeks from claim to repossession, and that timeline expected to lengthen, the cost and uncertainty of recovering a property from a problem tenant increases materially.

Tenancies become open-ended

All in-scope tenancies convert to Assured Periodic Tenancies — rolling month-to-month arrangements with no fixed end date. Fixed terms disappear. Landlords who previously relied on lease expiry as a natural exit point will find that option gone.

Rent increases restricted

Rents can only be increased once per year, with two months’ notice, via a statutory process. Tenants are actively encouraged to challenge increases at the First-tier Tribunal — and crucially, any tribunal determination cannot be backdated. Appealing a rent increase effectively pauses it, giving tenants a strong incentive to contest.

Upfront rent and deposits

Landlords can no longer require more than one month’s rent in advance. Bidding wars on rent are banned. Deposit rules remain broadly unchanged, but the consequences of non-compliance — including blocked possession proceedings — are sharper.

Wider enforcement powers

Rent Repayment Orders — which allow tenants to recover up to two years’ rent from non-compliant landlords — now carry a doubled maximum and extended limitation period. They apply to superior landlords, and corporate structures no longer provide insulation. A new Private Rented Sector Database will make compliance history publicly visible.

These changes do not make residential investment unviable — but they do make it more operationally complex, more compliance-intensive, and less forgiving of a passive approach.

Why Some Investors Are Looking at Commercial

Against this backdrop, a number of investors are taking a fresh look at commercial property — not as a reaction to residential regulation, but as a considered recalibration of where their capital can generate reliable, well-protected income.

The contrast with commercial leasing is stark:

  • Lease certainty: Commercial leases typically run for 5, 10 or 15 years with contracted-out terms under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. There is no equivalent of the rolling month-to-month APT.
  • Possession: Commercial landlords are not subject to the residential possession regime. Forfeiture, when applicable, is a materially different process.
  • Rent review: Upward-only rent reviews, index-linked provisions, and open market reviews are all commonplace in commercial leases — none of which are subject to FTT challenge.
  • Tenant obligations: Full Repairing and Insuring (FRI) leases place building maintenance, insurance, and running costs squarely with the tenant. The landlord’s net income is genuinely net.
  • No regulatory creep (yet): While commercial property has its own compliance landscape, it does not carry the accelerating tenant-protection overlay that is now being layered onto the residential sector.

Sectors attracting particular investor interest include industrial and logistics, roadside and drive-through, essential retail (convenience, pharmacy, food), and long-income assets let to institutional or listed covenants on 20–25 year leases. These asset types offer yield, predictability, and lease security that residential simply cannot match in the current legislative environment.

Speak to Singer Vielle

We work with private investors, property companies and funds to source commercial investment opportunities across the UK. If the residential sector is becoming harder to navigate, we’d welcome a conversation about where your capital could be working harder.

invest@singervielle.co.uk   |   +44 20 7935 7200   |   www.singervielle.com

This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Investors should take independent advice in relation to their specific circumstances. Singer Vielle Limited is a commercial property investment agency.

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