The latest on the abolition of Section 21 no fault evictions The short answer is that the abolition of Section 21 is highly unlikely to be in force before the autumn of 2025, and more likely to be early 2026, given the slow progress of the Renters’ Rights Bill through the House of Lords
Guide to the Renters’ Rights Bill - GOV. UK The Renters’ Rights Bill delivers our manifesto commitment to transform the experience of private renting, including by ending Section 21 ‘no fault’ evictions The bill will improve the
Abolition of section 21 and the Renters’ Rights Bill As with the Renters’ Reform Bill, the Renters’ Rights Bill provides for section 21 to be abolished so when the Bill becomes law, section 21 – and all its peculiarities – will be consigned to history
Outlawing of section 21 no-fault evictions and other major . . . The Renters’ Rights Bill will make significant changes to the residential private renting system While the headline may be the abolition of the section 21 no-fault eviction, there are fundamental changes throughout the system, further detailed in this Law-Now
Renters’ Rights Bill to end Section 21 ‘no fault evictions . . . abolish Section 21 ‘no fault evictions’, removing the threat of arbitrary evictions and increasing tenant security and stability “New clear and expanded possession grounds will be introduced so landlords can reclaim their properties when they need to”
Renters Rights Bill: What’s happening to evictions and . . . Once Section 21 has been scrapped, landlords will no longer be able to evict a tenant at two months’ notice (after the first six months of the tenancy and once any initial fixed period has expired) without giving a reason Every eviction will require a Section 8 notice that states one or more valid grounds