License Your Property with Primeland

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Get Compliant for the Renters’ Rights Act from 1 May 2026 From 1 May 2026, the Renters’ Rights Act changes how private tenancies work in England; especially around possession, rent increases, fixed terms, and the paperwork landlords must provide. If you are a landlord in East London, this is not something to “deal with later”. Late compliance tends to mean disputes, delays, and avoidable costs; and in some cases, you can lose key enforcement options if your paperwork and licensing are not in order. Primeland Property’s new service is built for one job; licence your property correctly and make sure your letting process is compliant ahead of 1 May 2026, so you protect income and reduce risk. What changes from 1 May 2026; and why it matters to landlords The Renters’ Rights Act is being implemented in stages, with major tenancy reforms commencing from 1 May 2026. Key points landlords need to plan for include; Section 21 ends; possession strategy must change Landlords will no longer be able to rely on “no fault” Section 21 notices; possession will run through updated Section 8 grounds instead. Fixed terms fall away; periodic tenancies become the default Most Assured Shorthold Tenancies move into a periodic structure under the new regime, which changes how landlords plan exit, rent reviews, and renewals. Rent increases tighten; process matters Rent increases are constrained by the new rules and will require proper notice and timing; sloppy rent review practice is likely to trigger disputes. Mandatory written information and “information sheet” obligations Government guidance confirms new requirements around written information for new tenancies from 1 May 2026, and an information sheet requirement for existing tenants by the end of May 2026. For the Government overview, use the official guide at GOV.UK; Guide to the Renters’ Rights Act here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/guide-to-the-renters-rights-act/guide-to-the-renters-rights-act For the Government campaign hub and landlord preparation guidance, see Renting is changing here: https://housinghub.campaign.gov.uk/renting-is-changing/ Licensing and Renters’ Rights; why these two issues are linked A surprising number of landlord problems start with one basic failure; the property should have been licensed, but wasn’t. When licensing is wrong, everything else becomes harder; including tenancy enforcement, rent recovery, and defending against tenant complaints. Licensing rules are borough-specific. In Tower Hamlets, for example, there are selective and HMO-related licensing schemes and defined areas where selective licensing applies; details are on the council site here: https://www.towerhamlets.gov.uk/lgnl/housing/Private-tenants-landlords-and-homeowners/Private-Landlords/Landlord_Licensing_Schemes.aspx and here: https://www.towerhamlets.gov.uk/lgnl/housing/Private-tenants-landlords-and-homeowners/Private-Landlords/Selective_Licensing.aspx If you want a fast starting point across London, the Greater London Authority provides a checker-style guide at Check if your rented property needs a property licence here: https://www.london.gov.uk/programmes-strategies/housing-and-land/renting-home/check-if-your-rented-property-needs-property-licence Primeland Property’s new service; licensing plus compliance, handled properly This service is designed for landlords who want a clear, documented compliance position before 1 May 2026; not vague advice and a checklist you never implement. 1) Licensing review; do you need a licence, and which one? We assess your property and tenancy type against the relevant borough rules and advise the correct route; selective licensing, additional licensing, or mandatory HMO licensing where applicable. For background on how licensing affects landlords and agents, see the sector overview at Propertymark here: https://www.propertymark.co.uk/policy/licensing.html 2) Licence application support Primeland Property can apply for the licence on the landlord’s behalf. Our Fees Guide sets out the admin fee for this service; see HMO Licensing or Selective Licensing in the guide here: https://primelandproperty.co.uk/fees-guide 3) Renters’ Rights readiness; tenancy and process updates We help you tighten the parts that will cause pain after 1 May 2026; tenancy paperwork, onboarding steps, rent review process, and the required tenant information delivery. For the official draft guidance on written information requirements and deadlines, review the Government PDF here: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/699d8cbec497bac082bc7562/Written_information_that_must_be_given_to_tenants-_landlord_guidance.pdf 4) Practical compliance checklist; built for landlords, not lawyers If you want to see the style of practical guidance we publish, read our internal article Landlords’ compliance checklist before 1 May 2026 here: https://primelandproperty.co.uk/landlords-compliance-checklist-before-1-may-2026 You can also review our Landlords Guide for how we approach compliance and management here: https://primelandproperty.co.uk/landlords-guide Who this service is for This is a strong fit if; You are letting in Tower Hamlets, Newham, or surrounding East London boroughs where licensing is active and enforcement is real. You want to reduce the risk of tenancy disputes and delays after 1 May 2026. You want a managed, documented path to compliance rather than patching things as problems appear. Book a licensing and Renters’ Rights compliance review with Primeland Property If you want your property licensed correctly and your letting process compliant ahead of 1 May 2026, speak to Primeland Property today. Primeland Property124 Whitechapel Road, London, E1 1JETel; 0207 377 5445https://primelandproperty.co.uk/For enquiries and bookings use our contact page here; https://primelandproperty.co.uk/contact-us All Articles