Renters’ Rights Bill: Industry Speculates on Possible Early 2026 Timeline
A flurry of Westminster speculation suggests landlords may face the new Renters' Rights Bill in early 2026. Writing in LandlordZONE, property commentator Nigel Lewis reports industry figures who believe ministers will try to push the Bill through the Lords before Parliament rises on 22 July, allowing guidance to be drafted over the summer and giving the sector "a feasible start in the new year" (LandlordZONE). For owners in England, the timing matters: once enacted, the Bill will scrap no-fault Section 21 evictions, introduce a single system of periodic tenancies, and expand local authority enforcement powers.
Summer recess is the crunch point
"I think the government will be looking to pass the Bill before the recess, so perhaps they'll shoehorn it in July." - Sean Hooker, Head of Redress, Property Redress Scheme
The Bill is poised for its Report Stage and Third Reading in the House of Lords. If peers sign it off before the summer break, the Commons can rubber-stamp any amendments in early autumn. Hooker argues that getting Royal Assent by July lets civil servants spend August drafting the raft of statutory instruments and updated court forms the reforms require.
What will actually change?
Core measures include:
- Abolition of Section 21: landlords will have to rely on revamped Section 8 grounds for possession.
- Rolling periodic tenancies from day one, ending fixed-term ASTs.
- A Decent Homes Standard for the private rented sector, enforced by councils.
- Mandatory digital Property Portal registration and Ombudsman membership for all landlords.
The detailed wording remains fluid, but the Bill's skeleton text is available on the Parliament website. Secondary regulations will flesh out new notice periods, evidence thresholds, and portal fees.
When could the rules bite?
Some observers now pencil in January 2026 for the commencement of the flagship clauses.
What landlords should do for now
For the moment, the only sensible policy is to carry on exactly as normal. Until the Bill secures Royal Assent and the government lays the statutory instruments that activate its clauses, the Housing Act 1988 and existing regulations remain fully in force.
Landlords should, of course, stay alert to credible updates - particularly any changes to possession grounds, notice periods, or the proposed Property Portal - but there is no advantage in pre-emptive changes that could need redoing once the final wording appears. The Guild will issue clear, step-by-step guidance as soon as Parliament settles the timetable and publishes the legislation.
With parliamentary time tight, July's Lords sessions are pivotal. The Guild of Residential Landlords will be ready to act quickly once implementation dates are confirmed.
More information about the proposed Renters' Rights Bill is explained here.
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