This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. To find out more about cookies on this website and how to delete cookies, see our privacy notice.
Analytics

Tools which collect anonymous data to enable us to see how visitors use our site and how it performs. We use this to improve our products, services and user experience.

Marketing

A bit of data which remembers the affiliate who forwarded a user to our site and recognises orders from those who become customers through that affiliate.

Essential

Tools that enable essential services and functionality, including identity verification, service continuity and site security.

 

Crackdown on Minimum Room Size for Tenants

By 2 min read • October 26, 2016

red brick houseIn a bid to cut the number of rogue landlords operating in the UK, the government has proposed a mandatory standard of 6.52 square meters for a bedroom in a shared house. The room size would apply to any bedroom, irrespective of whether a couple or an individual was living there, so bunk beds are not allowed as a way of bypassing the rule.

******Whoops! Looks like this is an old post that isn’t relevant any more :/ ******

******Visit the blog home page for the most up to date news. ******

Tiny Bedrooms Banned
The government hopes the new proposal will stop rogue landlords advertising rooms for rent that are no larger than the average rabbit hutch. It should also discourage landlords from advertising rooms where tenants are expected to share with other tenants.

Clearing Up Confusion
The proposal comes after a court case in 2015 caused confusion. Existing legislation specified minimum space standards, but the ruling in this case allowed a landlord to renew his licence for a property with a bedroom smaller than the minimum guidelines.

Further proposals put forward by the government include plans to extend the landlord licensing scheme to include flats above shops and business premises, and a more rigorous test to decide whether a landlord is a ‘fit and proper’ person.

The new rules will only apply to HMOs, but 174k more properties will be affected.

“We agree that tackling criminal landlords must be a priority. We wait to see the full details, but powers are already available to tackle overcrowding which is about the number of people crammed into a room, not the size of a room,” says the RLA.

“What is needed is proper enforcement of existing powers.”

Was this post useful?
0/600
Awesome!
Thanks so much for your feedback!
Got it!
Thanks for your feedback.
Share with friends:
Copied
Popular articles

Get the best of Landlord Insider
delivered to your inbox fortnightly

Sign up and we’ll send you our latest posts, tax tips, legal tips, software tips and compliance deadlines, everything you need to know every two weeks. Unsubscribe any time.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.