England’s rental landscape is changing. The planned abolition of Section 21 “no-fault” evictions
fundamentally alters how landlords can regain possession of a property.
For HMO landlords, understanding the new process is vital. HMOs involve multiple tenants, shared
contracts, and complex living arrangements — making eviction management more complicated than
single-let properties.
Why Section 21 Is Being Abolished
The government’s rationale is:
Protect tenants from arbitrary eviction
Encourage longer-term, more secure tenancies
Balance landlord and tenant rights
Once abolished, landlords cannot use Section 21 notices to regain possession without a legal reason.
Every eviction must be based on demonstrable grounds under Section 8 or successor legislation.
How This Impacts HMO Landlords
1. No More “No-Fault” Evictions
Landlords can no longer rely on a simple notice period to end tenancies.
Implications:
You must now demonstrate a breach or valid reason for eviction
Evictions take longer and require stronger evidence
Tenants may have more time to respond or contest notices
2. Grounds-Based Eviction Becomes Standard
Typical grounds include:
Rent arrears
Breach of tenancy agreement (damage, antisocial behaviour)
Illegal activity on premises
In HMOs, this may mean:
Issuing separate notices for multiple tenants
Keeping detailed records of breaches
Coordinating with local authorities where licencing conditions are implicated
3. Longer Notice Periods
Under the reformed regime, notice periods will vary depending on the ground relied upon. Some landlord grounds (such as selling or occupation by the landlord) require longer notice than the former Section 21 process, while serious tenant breaches may still carry shorter periods.
For HMOs with high tenant turnover, this could:
Delay room re-letting
Increase void costs
Require careful financial planning
4. Stronger Documentation and Evidence
Landlords must maintain:
Accurate tenancy agreements
Clear records of rent payments
Incident logs for any breaches
Evidence of remedial actions taken
Without this, court-based eviction may fail.
5. Impact on HMO Strategy
Short-term lets may become less viable
Professional tenant screening and management increase in importance
Structured dispute resolution becomes critical
The emphasis shifts from “flexibility” to “management quality.”
Practical Steps for HMO Landlords
✅ Review Tenancy Agreements
Ensure contracts:
Clearly define tenant responsibilities
Include clauses for rent payment, behaviour, and property use
Align with future Section 8 grounds
✅ Strengthen Record-Keeping
Maintain:
Rent statements
Maintenance logs
Incident reports
Tenant communications
This protects you if eviction is required.
✅ Consider Management Support
Professional HMO management can:
Track breaches efficiently
Coordinate notices for multiple tenants
Reduce risk of legal delays
Support faster dispute resolution
✅ Educate Tenants
Clear onboarding reduces breaches:
Explain expectations
Outline consequences for violations
Encourage early reporting of problems
Proactive communication prevents escalation.
The end of Section 21 changes the HMO landscape significantly. If you want to review your tenancies, ensure contracts are robust, and reduce eviction risk, our team can provide an operational audit and tenancy strategy review.
Planning now protects your income and reduces stress in the months ahead.

