14 November 2025

Roadmap to Reform: Unpacking the Implementation of the Renters’ Rights Act 2025

< Back

The private rented sector in England is about to undergo its most significant overhaul in decades. The recently passed Renters’ Rights Act 2025 (RRA 2025) marks a deliberate shift in the balance between landlords and tenants: making renting safer, fairer and more secure. The government has now published an official implementation roadmap, laying out how and when the reform will be phased in.

In this article we’ll provide a detailed breakdown of the roadmap, explain what the key phases mean for landlords, letting agents and tenants, comment on the practical implications, and highlight preparatory steps that stakeholders should be taking now.

 

🔷 Why the Reform Matters

The “what” of the Act is already widely known: end of so-called “no-fault” evictions (via Housing Act 1988 Section 21), move toward open-ended tenancies, restrictions on rent increases, bans on bidding wars, tougher standards on property condition and discrimination protections.

But the “why” is just as important:

All of this sets the stage for the roadmap. The challenge now is one of implementation. The framework law is in place; the practical work lies ahead.

 

🔷 The Three-Phase Roll-out

The government has opted for a phased approach to enable a smoother transition rather than a “big-bang” overnight change. The broad timetable is:

Phase Timing Key components
Phase 1 – Tenancy reform 1 May 2026 (for England) Abolition of section 21 no-fault evictions; move to periodic tenancies (existing & new); restrictions on rent in advance, bidding wars; tightening of discrimination rules; cap rent rises to once per year.
Phase 2 – Infrastructure & enforcement From late 2026 Introduction of a national database for private rented sector (PRS) properties and landlords; a Private Landlord Ombudsman; improved enforcement powers for local authorities.
Phase 3 – Quality standard reform 2027-2028 (and subject to consultation) Extending the Decent Homes Standard into the private rented sector; incorporation of Awaab’s Law-style obligations to tackle hazards like damp, mould, extreme cold/heat, fire risk.

👉 Phase 1: What Landlords and Tenants Need to Know

Effective 1 May 2026.
Key changes:

Implications:

👉 Phase 2: Building the Framework

From late 2026 onward.
This phase is about the “plumbing” of the new regime: enforcement, oversight and data. Key features:

Implications:

👉 Phase 3: Raising Standards

2027-28 (subject to consultation).
The last phase pushes beyond tenure and process into housing quality. Key items:

Implications:

 

🔷 What This Means for Key Stakeholders

👉 Landlords

👉 Letting Agents / Property Managers

👉 Tenants

 

🔷 Preparatory Checklist — What Should You Be Doing Now?

 

🔷 Final Thoughts

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 introduces a paradigm shift for the private rented sector in England — from shortened tenancies and insecure renting to a system of greater stability, fairness and quality. The implementation roadmap provides a sensible phased approach, giving stakeholders time to adapt while ensuring that the reforms will not be delayed indefinitely.

For landlords and letting agents, the message is clear: move now, prepare early, communicate clearly. For tenants, the reforms are a welcome step toward safer, more secure housing, but the real test will be in day-to-day delivery and enforcement.

Ultimately, the success of this reform will depend on effective preparation, strong implementation and the sector’s willingness to embrace change — not just in legal terms, but in ethos. If you’re involved in the private rented sector, now is the time to gear up for this new era of renting.

 

✨ If you would like tailored advice about buying, selling or investing locally, get in touch with your nearest Hannells branch or arrange a free, no-obligation property valuation today.

 

Click HERE to book your free, no-obligation valuation.

Get in touch with your local branch of Hannells by clicking HERE

To catch all of our latest content, make sure you subscribe to our social media channels below!

Facebook: Facebook.com/Hannells

Instagram: Instagram/HannellsEstateAgents

Youtube: Hannells on Youtube

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/hannells-estate-agents

Hannells – A Moving Experience…