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Tenant Fees Ban comes into force from 1 June 2019

Speaking at the third reading of the Tenant Fees Bill in the House of Lords today, Lord Bourne of Aberystwyth outlined that following royal assent, the provisions of the Tenant Fees Bill will come into effect on the 1st June 2019 for all tenancies signed on or after the date. The third and final reading comes after controversial amendments in the Bills Report Stage, which lowered the deposit cap from six weeks to five weeks for properties with an annual rent of less than £50,000. This will likely affect some tenants’ ability to find a home, especially if they have pets or poor credit history.

In regard to contractual damages, Lord Bourne also provided further reassurance to the house, arguing there is plenty of case law in place that already deals with damages, and this will ensure that they are not used as a back door to default fees.

A statement from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said:

“We believe these amendments strike a fair balance between improving affordability for tenants whilst ensuring that landlords and agents have the financial security they need.”

Key Points of the Bill:

Default fees will be limited to charges for replacement keys or a respective security device, and late rent payments only

Cap holding deposits at no more than one week’s rent, applying to a maximum of one property only

Security deposits will be capped at five weeks rent

Creates a civil offence with a fine of £5,000 for a first offence and civil penalties of up to £30,000

Amend the Consumer Rights Act 2015 to specify that the letting agent transparency requirements should apply to property portals such as Rightmove and Zoopla

Local authorities will be able to retain the money raised through financial penalties with this money reserved for future local housing enforcement.

Alongside rent and deposits, agents and landlords will only be permitted to charge tenants fees associated with:

A change or early termination of a tenancy when requested by the tenant

Utilities, communication services and Council Tax

Payments arising from a default by the tenant such as replacing lost key.

After it leaves the Lords this evening, the Bill will return to the Commons, after which it will receive Royal Assent and become law.

A lead local authority will police and oversee the new measures will be announced next month, something which the NLA has repeatedly pressed for clarification on regarding enforcement.

Source: landlords.org.uk