Lucy Alexander
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Squabbling with the landlord over the deposit is a rite of passage familiar to every student living in digs.
As of today, however, landlords have effectively lost control of tenants’ deposits and face hefty fines for non-compliance with new legislation. The new rules apply as much to the casual landlord who lets an old flat to a friend as to the professionals with a lucrative portfolio of rental properties, so long as they sign an “assured shorthold tenancy” agreement, which accounts for the vast majority of tenancies where rental income is under £25,000 per year.
Any landlord who fails to join one of three schemes — the Deposit Protection Service, the Tenancy Deposit Solution, or the Tenancy Deposit Scheme — will forfeit his eviction rights and may be forced to pay tenants a fine of three times the deposit amount.
Professional bodies may have informed their members of the new law, but fewer than half (48 per cent) of properties are rented through a letting agent, and only a handful of 870,000 private landlords in England and Wales belong to any professional organisation.
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Does any one know of any action group against this new government/government back handed money making idea ??
I now have £100 less on tenant up take, and not allowed to charge the tenant.
Then end of tenancy when seemingly every tenant uses deposit as rent as well as always at least some damage I'll prob end up with a dispute and faf for proving it before I can get anything back.
Stinks ! why am i not supprised.
Ian, Cheshire,
Why not ask for NIL deposit and have the tenant pay 2 months in advance??
At the end of the term you can either refund 1 months rent or have the tenant not pay the last month?
...Would this stand up in a dispute?? Is it too close to taking a deposit??
Haggis, Leeds, UK
Methinks I'd rather not take a deposit from the tenant and do without yet more paperwork.
Our lives are blighted by legislation in another vain attempt to eliminate a few dodgy dealers. It won't work.
I'm quite capable of dealing with deposit monies and see nothing wrong in using that money however I see fit.
Next we'll be refunding half the rent because the place hasn't been wrecked. All madness!
MUG, MUGCITY, TENANT Heaven
This buy-to-let game is a nightmare for the casual investor! I am a busy working mother of two under 4's and I feel trapped into letting my old flat out for ever as I can't afford the capital gains tax bill if I sell!
What more red tape?
And I'm sure this deposit thing will be a nice little earner for some middle man...
groan!
I should have become a subsistence fisherman in Portugal as I said I would when finishing uni.
xx
sam, london,
Does this work for current agreements? Or is it for tenancies from now on?
J, London,