Section 21 Abolition: What 'No-Fault' Eviction Reform Means
Section 21 'no-fault' eviction notices are abolished under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. Landlords must now rely on Section 8 grounds.
Overview
Section 21 of the Housing Act 1988 has been the primary route by which private landlords have ended assured shorthold tenancies (ASTs) for over 35 years. It allowed a landlord to obtain possession without giving any reason, provided a 2-month notice was given and certain conditions were met. The Renters' Rights Act 2025 abolishes Section 21. Landlords must now use Section 8 of the Housing Act 1988 and cite a statutory ground for possession in Schedule 2 — and prove that ground if the tenant disputes it. The abolition is intended to give tenants greater security of tenure and prevent retaliatory eviction (where a landlord serves a Section 21 notice in response to a complaint about disrepair). New possession grounds are added in Schedule 2 to handle situations that Section 21 previously covered — notably a landlord wishing to sell or to move themselves or family into the property.
Who Can Use This Process
- Affects all private assured tenancies in England (including converted ASTs)
- Does not affect Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland
- Does not retroactively invalidate Section 21 notices that have already led to a court order
Step-by-Step Process
Check the commencement date
Section 21 is abolished from a date set by commencement regulations made by the Secretary of State. Check legislation.gov.uk for the latest commencement order before relying on Section 21 (landlords) or assuming it has been abolished (tenants).
Landlords: identify the relevant Section 8 ground
Schedule 2 of the Housing Act 1988 sets out mandatory grounds (court must order possession) and discretionary grounds (court has discretion). Common grounds: 1A (landlord selling), 1B (landlord/family moving in), 8 (substantial rent arrears — 3+ months at the date of service AND hearing), 12 (breach of tenancy), 14 (anti-social behaviour).
Serve a valid Section 8 notice
Use the prescribed form (Form 3 or its post-RRA replacement). Specify the ground(s), set out the facts relied on, and observe the statutory notice period for that ground (typically 14 days for ASB, 2 weeks to 2 months for other grounds). Defective notices are routinely struck out.
Apply to court for possession
If the tenant does not vacate, the landlord applies to the County Court using Form N5 (with N119 particulars). The court will set a hearing. The tenant can defend and raise counterclaims (e.g. for disrepair). Mandatory grounds usually give an order if proved; discretionary grounds require the court to consider reasonableness.
Tenants: defending Section 8 proceedings
Get legal advice immediately. Common defences: dispute the facts (e.g. rent arrears not at the level claimed), challenge notice validity, counterclaim for disrepair, raise the Equality Act 2010 (discrimination) or Human Rights Act 1998 (Article 8) where appropriate. Legal aid may be available for possession proceedings.
Important Warnings
Landlords: ground 1A and 1B require the landlord to genuinely intend to sell or occupy. Bad faith use can result in tenant compensation under the Act's new wrongful eviction provisions.
Tenants: do not refuse to leave just because a Section 21 has been served pre-commencement — the notice may still be valid under transitional rules.
Existing Section 21 cases listed at court before commencement are processed under the old law.
Useful Links
Frequently asked questions
- What are the most common mistakes to avoid?
- Watch out for: Landlords: ground 1A and 1B require the landlord to genuinely intend to sell or occupy. Bad faith use can result in tenant compensation under the Act's new wrongful eviction provisions.; Tenants: do not refuse to leave just because a Section 21 has been served pre-commencement — the notice may still be valid under transitional rules.; Existing Section 21 cases listed at court before commencement are processed under the old law.. If you're unsure on any of these, get advice from a regulated solicitor or a free service like Citizens Advice before acting.
- Where can I find the official forms and guidance?
- The official sources are: Housing Act 1988, Schedule 2 (as amended) — legislation.gov.uk; Renters' Rights Act 2025 — legislation.gov.uk; Shelter — possession proceedings. Always use the forms / guidance from the issuing authority's own site — third-party copies can be out of date.
- Can I do this myself without a solicitor?
- Yes — many people complete this kind of matter as a litigant in person. The site walks through each step in plain English. A solicitor is recommended if: large sums are at stake, the other side has legal representation, the matter involves criminal liability, children, immigration, or you're unsure on any procedural deadline. Free advice is available from Citizens Advice, Law Centres, and (for some matters) LawWorks pro bono clinics.