AST Tenant vs Lodger: Statutory Protection vs Excluded Occupier
An assured shorthold tenant has full statutory security of tenure and deposit protection. A lodger (excluded licensee) can be evicted on notice without a court order. The distinction turns on exclusive possession.
Overview
Whether a person sharing a residential property is a tenant or a lodger (licensee) has enormous practical consequences. Following Street v Mountford [1985] AC 809, the courts look at substance, not labels: if a residential occupier has exclusive possession of the whole or a defined part of the property, and pays rent for a term, they are likely a tenant โ regardless of what the agreement calls them. A lodger, by contrast, shares the property with the owner-occupier and typically does not have exclusive possession. The significance of this distinction is stark: an AST tenant can only be evicted via a court possession order following a valid s.21 or s.8 notice (Housing Act 1988). A lodger (excluded occupier under Housing Act 1988 s.3A) can be asked to leave on reasonable notice, and if they refuse, the owner can change the locks โ no court order is required.
Side-by-Side Comparison
AST Tenant
Pros
- Full security of tenure โ landlord must obtain a court possession order; self-help eviction is a criminal offence (Protection from Eviction Act 1977 s.1)
- Deposit must be protected in a government-approved scheme within 30 days (Housing Act 2004 s.213)
- Implied repairing obligations on landlord (Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 ss.11โ16)
- Right to written tenancy agreement, gas safety certificate, EPC, and How to Rent guide on commencement
Cons
- Landlord can serve a valid s.21 notice (no-fault) or s.8 notice (fault-based grounds) to recover possession
- Tied to fixed term โ early termination requires a break clause or landlord agreement
- Joint tenancy risk โ one joint tenant can serve a notice to quit terminating the tenancy for all
Best For
Any person occupying residential premises as their main home, where the landlord does not live in the same property, and where exclusive possession is granted.
Lodger (Excluded Licensee)
Pros
- More flexible arrangements โ easier to end for both parties
- Owner does not need a court order to recover possession โ notice + reasonable time to leave is sufficient
- Can include services (meals, cleaning) as part of the arrangement โ these indicate a licence
- Often cheaper than a self-contained let
Cons
- No security of tenure โ can be asked to leave on reasonable notice (usually the contractual notice period or a reasonable period if none specified)
- No mandatory deposit protection โ though best practice to use a scheme
- No right to the How to Rent guide, gas safety certificate, or EPC as a matter of statutory obligation
- Vulnerable to sudden eviction without court oversight
Best For
Occupiers sharing a home with the owner-occupier โ a room in the owner's house, for example, where the owner retains access to all communal areas and may provide services.
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
If you occupy a self-contained property (flat, house, or self-contained annexe) where the landlord does not live, you are almost certainly an AST tenant with full statutory rights โ regardless of what the agreement says. If you rent a room in the owner's home and share the kitchen or bathroom with the owner, you are likely a lodger. Landlords who use sham licence agreements to avoid tenant protections risk prosecution and civil liability. If in doubt about your status, contact Shelter (0808 800 4444) for free advice.