Letting Agent and Landlord Fees Banned in Queen’s Speech

By 2 min read • June 22, 2017

Theresa May has effectively torn up the Conservative Party Manifesto in the 2017 Queen’s Speech. Previous high-profile bills, including policies on fox hunting, scrapping school dinners, and grammar schools, were excluded from the Queen’s Speech, but the Draft Tenant’s Fees Bill has made its way in.

*****Whoops! Looks like this is an old post that isn’t relevant any more :/ *****

*****Visit the blog home page for the most up to date news. *****

The New Tenant’s Fees Bill introduced in Queen’s Speech

The new Tenant’s Fees Bill is designed to introduce “fairness and transparency in the housing market”. The proposal to ban letting agent fees was first mentioned in Philip Hammond’s Autumn Statement last year, but now landlords are also being prevented from charging anything other than rent as a condition of their tenancy agreement. However, the new rules will only apply to tenancies in England.

Tenant’s Groups Delighted by Fees Ban

Tenant pressure groups are delighted by the inclusion of the draft bill.

“This is progress on renters’ rights and the benefits will be directly felt by millions of renters in this country. However, there’s still more to be done and neither Brexit nor May’s minority government should get in the way of that,” said Vicky Spratt, the instigator of a campaign to ban letting agent fees.

“We need genuinely affordable rents and secure tenure for renters, the cost of renting is way out of line with wages and the stresses this puts on people are enormous.”

Measures to Help Tenants Recover Unlawful Fees

The Bill also includes measures to enable tenants to recover unlawful fees that have been charged by letting agents and landlords.

Read more about the Tenants Fee Bill in our ultimate landlord guide:

Tenant Fees Ban – The Landlord’s Guide

Was this post useful?
0/600
Awesome!
Thanks so much for your feedback!
Got it!
Thanks for your feedback.
Share with friends:
Copied
Popular articles

Get the best of Landlord Insider
delivered to your inbox fortnightly

Sign up and we’ll send you our latest posts, tax tips, legal tips, software tips and compliance deadlines, everything you need to know every two weeks. Unsubscribe any time.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.