Landlord Register: Good or bad?

Landlord Register: Good or bad?

Landlord Register - Good or Bad? 


A recent report claims that The Generation Rent Activists Group is pushing for a Landlord register to role out nationally and could mean more tax revenues for HMRC.

Selective licencing has already been rolled out in certain boroughs across the country and has flagged a number of unsafe properties compared to those without any licence scheme. 

They have also been pushing for stricter licensing, claiming those local authorities that require landlords to be licensed take over twice as much enforcement action as other councils.

Baroness Alicia Kennedy, director of Generation Rent, says: “Existing licensing schemes have a clear track record of helping councils to identify unsafe homes and bring them up to standard, but the vast majority of private renters are not protected by them.“

Nationwide landlord registration would give enforcement authorities valuable intelligence about this sector, make it easier to inform tenants of their rights, and prevent criminals from renting out homes in the first place. 

Her group also claims government figures show that 32 councils with selective licensing schemes identified an average of 158 ‘unsafe’ homes each, compared with 63 on average across 200 councils without such schemes during 2019-20. 

The group says it believes licensing gives councils greater powers to investigate homes and take action where they are found to be unsafe. 

Of the English councils that reported data in 2019-20, it says 32 councils which operated selective licensing schemes in that period reported finding 5,052 private rented homes with “category 1” hazards following an inspection - an average of 158 homes per council - and that 85 per cent of these were made free of hazards. 

There were 200 councils without selective licensing and they reported 12,607 unsafe homes in total - 63 homes per council - resolving 65 per cent of cases.

Generation Rent says a consequence of a national register could be increased tax revenues “since HMRC has no way to track down landlords who don’t declare rental income.”
It also claims the ‘tax gap’ from under-declared rent is £540m per year.

There has already been a number of changes over recent years with compliance and further changes being made such as EPC improvements making the Buy to Let market less appealing. Landlords & Agents have been expressing their concerns on the recent article stating it’s all one sides and the market is being ruined. 

Another claims the licence was rejected based upon access from the Tenant. If this is the case, then more needs to be done to work with Landlords and not against them.

”DASH Nottingham want to inspect a property for their accreditation process, I have said fine and supplied all requested information and contact details as requested, tenants have said no thanks and won’t allow them to inspect. Now they say they won’t accredited me? I have pointed out the tenants are not obligated to allow them in to inspect and I can’t harass them either”

This could be a great way to enforce or oversee Landlords not complying with regulations but it needs to be efficient and cost effective, what are your views on this?

Let us know in the comments below, we’d love to hear your thoughts.


Lettings Managing Partner




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