Here are the latest developments on the Renters’ Rights Act (RRA), focused on England:
- The RRA received royal assent in October 2025, marking a broad transformation of the private rented sector, with phased implementations beginning in 2026. The government has outlined 1 May 2026 as the initial rollout date for Phase 1 reforms.[2][8]
- Key Phase 1 changes include ending “no-fault” evictions by abolishing Section 21, converting all tenancies to rolling periodic ones, reforming possession grounds, and restricting rent increases to annual cycles with a statutory notice framework.[4][5][2]
- Other notable provisions in Phase 1 are banning rent in advance beyond the initial period, banning housing discrimination against families and benefit recipients, allowing tenants to request permission to keep pets, and introducing enhanced enforcement mechanisms and a rent repayment order framework.[7][4]
- Several legal and advisory sources emphasize the transition will be gradual, with further measures such as a PRS Ombudsman and PRS Database to be rolled out in later phases, as the market and enforcement structures adapt.[3][5][4]
- In summary, landlords should prepare for substantive changes beginning May 2026, including ending no-fault evictions, retooling tenancy types, and updating rent governance, while monitoring milestones for the later phases of the Act.[5][2]
Illustration: a timeline of the Act’s implementation milestones is available from multiple practice notes and government announcements, showing royal assent in Oct 2025 and the Phase 1 start in May 2026.[8][2]
If you’d like, I can pull a concise fact sheet tailored to your situation (e.g., if you own rental properties in Miami or Florida, or if you’re specifically seeking guidance for landlords vs tenants). However, note that the Renters’ Rights Act described above applies to England; for Florida, there are separate state or local renter protections in effect. For Florida, I can summarize current renter rights there and any recent state-level proposals if you want.
Citations:
- Government confirms Royal Assent and 1 May 2026 Phase 1 rollout.[8]
- Law firm and practitioner updates detailing Phase 1 reforms (abolition of Section 21, tenancy reform, rent controls, and pet requests).[2][4][5]
- Additional notes on phased implementation and future PRS bodies (Ombudsman, Database).[3][4]
Sources
In previous insights we have considered the content of the Bill and the likely impact on the private rented sector (“PRS”). Here we have set out the key questions we are seeing from our clients and…
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