Renter Rights Time Line *

PIMS | Landlord Legislation

A PIMS timeline of the laws regulating the private rented sector

This page pulls the main private rented sector laws, regulations and incoming reforms into one place and arranges them in date order, with the most recent changes first. It is designed as a PIMS information page for landlords and letting agents who want a clearer view of the legal framework that has shaped the sector, what applies now, and what is still ahead.

Important: this page is a practical legislation map, not a substitute for checking the exact wording of the Act, regulation, local licensing scheme or current government guidance that applies to a particular property.
PIMS links: once you identify the law or compliance area you need, move next to the PIMS Tenancy Agreement, Document Centre, Preparation to Let, Deposit Compliance or related legislation pages.
JurisdictionEngland-focused private rented sector
OrderMost recent law event first
FormatPast, present and future timeline
UseQuick legislation overview and navigation

Contents

Timeline of key landlord legislation

The most recent law events are shown first, followed by the recent background, then the historic legal foundations.

Current transition: 2025 to 2026 Renters’ Rights Act, written tenancy information and the new PRS structure
  1. 31 May 2026

    Information sheet deadline for existing tenancies (click HERE GOV ONLY SITE ALlowed)

    Where existing private rented sector tenancies already have written agreements, landlords do not need to re-issue them, but they do need to provide the government information sheet by this date.

  2. 2026

    Written tenancy information regulations

    The new written terms and information framework is supported by secondary legislation published in 2026 so landlords can prepare compliant tenancy documentation.

  3. 1 May 2026

    Main private rented sector commencement date

    Government landlord guidance says the new rules apply on or after 1 May 2026 for the private rented sector in England.

  4. 2025

    Renters’ Rights Act 2025

    The major restructuring Act for the current generation of private rented sector reform. It received Royal Assent on 27 October 2025.

    • Abolishes section 21 for the reformed PRS regime.
    • Moves the sector to a periodic tenancy structure.
    • Recasts possession, rent, discrimination and wider compliance rules.
Future pipeline: 2027, 2030 and 2035 Later extension points and the next reform wave
  1. 2035

    Decent Homes Standard for the PRS

    The government response on the reformed Decent Homes Standard says the new standard will apply to the private rented sector from 2035.

  2. 2030

    Future MEES target

    Government has committed to a higher minimum energy efficiency standard for privately rented homes by 2030.

  3. 2027

    Private Registered Providers and later rollout

    Government guidance says the Renters’ Rights rules apply to private registered providers of social housing from 2027.

Recent reform period: 2018 to 2022 Fitness for habitation, fee bans, electrical safety and stronger alarm duties
  1. 2022

    Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022

    Tightened the alarm regime from 1 October 2022 and widened the practical compliance expectations on landlords.

  2. 2020 / 2021

    Electrical Safety Standards in the PRS Regulations 2020

    These created the current electrical inspection and report regime for the private rented sector in England.

    • Regulations came into force on 1 June 2020.
    • Applied to new specified tenancies from 1 July 2020.
    • Applied to existing specified tenancies from 1 April 2021.
  3. 2019

    Tenant Fees Act 2019

    The fee ban legislation. This reshaped landlord and letting agent charging practice and created a tightly limited list of permitted payments.

    • Fee ban widely associated with the 1 June 2019 implementation date.
    • Strong links to deposit caps, holding deposits and section 21 consequences.
  4. 2018 / 2019

    Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018

    This strengthened the tenant’s ability to enforce housing condition standards through the courts. In England it came into force on 20 March 2019.

Modern PRS framework: 2004 to 2015 Deposits, HMO licensing, retaliatory eviction rules, EPC and early modern compliance duties
  1. 2015

    AST Notices and Prescribed Requirements Regulations 2015

    These tied section 21 validity to prescribed requirements and helped shape the modern document service and compliance audit trail expected of landlords.

  2. 2015

    Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (England) Regulations 2015

    These created baseline alarm requirements and later became stricter through the 2022 amendment regulations.

  3. 2015

    Energy Efficiency (Private Rented Property) Regulations 2015

    The MEES framework. This created the route to minimum EPC standards for private rented homes and later developed into the familiar restrictions on letting sub-standard property.

  4. 2015

    Deregulation Act 2015

    A major change to section 21 practice, including retaliatory eviction protections and prescribed requirements linked to possession validity.

  5. 2011

    Localism Act 2011

    This amended the Housing Act 2004 deposit rules and tightened the consequences of non-compliance. In practice it became very important in deposit claims and section 21 strategy.

  6. 2004

    Housing Act 2004

    One of the most important modern landlord statutes. It introduced the tenancy deposit scheme framework and the HMO licensing regime and sits behind many housing standards and enforcement powers.

    • Tenancy deposit protection.
    • Mandatory and additional HMO licensing structure.
    • Housing health and safety enforcement framework.
Foundations: 1977 to 1988 Protection from eviction, repairing duties and the modern assured tenancy structure
  1. 1988

    Housing Act 1988

    The Act that shaped the modern assured and assured shorthold tenancy system and became central to possession law for the private rented sector.

    • Section 8 grounds remain important.
    • Section 21 became central to AST possession practice until its removal under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025.
  2. 1986

    Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 comes into force

    Important because it anchors many of the practical duties landlords still work with today.

  3. 1985

    Landlord and Tenant Act 1985

    The main repairing and landlord information framework. In practice this sits behind repair, condition, service charge and landlord identity issues.

    • Section 11 repair obligations remain fundamental.
    • The Act later became the home for the fitness for human habitation provisions as amended.
  4. 1977

    Protection from Eviction Act 1977

    The core unlawful eviction and harassment protection. This remains one of the most important baseline laws in landlord and tenant practice.