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UK Law Reference
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Housing
Updated 2026-05-16

Assured Shorthold Tenancy vs Licence to Occupy

The legal distinction between an assured shorthold tenancy (AST) and a licence to occupy is not determined by the contract's label — it is determined by the substance of the arrangement and has significant consequences for the occupier's rights.

Overview

Whether an arrangement to occupy residential property is a tenancy or a licence is one of the most important questions in housing law. The Supreme Court's decision in Street v Mountford [1985] established that the label used in the agreement is not determinative — what matters is the substance of the arrangement. An occupier who has exclusive possession of a property for a term at a rent will generally be a tenant, not a licensee. This matters enormously because tenants have strong statutory protections (security of tenure, deposit protection, section 21 notice requirements) while licensees can generally be evicted on reasonable notice.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Assured Shorthold Tenancy (AST)

Cost: Standard residential rent; deposit (up to 5 weeks' rent for ASTs with annual rent under £50,000)
Time: Fixed term or periodic; security of tenure for duration of tenancy

Pros

  • Strong statutory protections — landlord must use formal s.8 or s.21 notice procedures to recover possession
  • Deposit protection rights — Housing Act 2004 requires deposit in a government scheme within 30 days
  • Implied repairing obligations on the landlord under Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 ss.11–16
  • Right to request rent repayment orders if landlord committed housing offences
  • Protection under Renters (Reform) Act 2025 (ongoing implementation) against no-fault eviction

Cons

  • Landlord can recover possession via s.21 (no-fault, though being phased out) or s.8 (fault-based) — tenant may still be required to leave
  • Landlord can apply for possession more readily with a valid s.21 notice in some circumstances
  • Joint tenancy complications — one tenant serving a notice to quit may end the tenancy for all (known as the Hammersmith problem)

Best For

All occupiers of residential property who have exclusive possession of the whole property (or a clearly demarcated part) and pay regular rent for a defined or periodic term.

Licence to Occupy

Cost: No statutory limits on licence fees; deposit protection rules do not apply
Time: No security of tenure — terminable on reasonable notice

Pros

  • More flexible for occupier in some situations — can be for very short periods
  • Lodger licences are simpler and cheaper to administer for the licensor
  • Suitable for holiday lets, temporary worker accommodation, and supported housing

Cons

  • No security of tenure — licence can be terminated on reasonable notice (usually the contractual notice period)
  • No deposit protection requirements unless the arrangement is found to be a disguised tenancy
  • No right to statutory notice procedures — reasonable notice is all that is required
  • Landlords sometimes use sham licence agreements to avoid tenancy protections — courts will look through these to the true arrangement

Best For

Genuine situations where exclusive possession is absent — lodgers (sharing with the owner in the same property), holiday lets under 31 days, and service occupancies (where accommodation is required for the performance of employment duties).

Key Differences

AspectAssured Shorthold Tenancy (AST)Licence to Occupy
Exclusive possessionYes — tenant has exclusive possession of the propertyNo — licensor may share or have access to the property (lodger scenario); or arrangements may be sham
Security of tenureYes — statutory protection under Housing Act 1988; formal possession proceedings requiredNo — terminable on reasonable notice without court order in most cases
Deposit protectionYes — Housing Act 2004 applies; 1-3x penalty for non-complianceNo — no statutory scheme required
Repair obligationsLandlord has implied obligations under Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 ss.11–16Common law only — depends on the licence agreement
Determining factorExclusive possession + term + rent = tenancy (Street v Mountford [1985])Absence of exclusive possession OR licensor sharing/residing in property = licence
Sham agreementsN/A — tenancy arises from substance not labelCourts will re-characterise sham licence agreements as tenancies if the substance shows exclusive possession (Antoniades v Villiers [1990])

Our Recommendation

Occupiers should be aware that a document labelled 'licence' may in law be a tenancy if it gives exclusive possession. Conversely, a genuine lodger or holiday let will be a licence regardless of what the agreement says. If you are unsure of your status, seek advice from Shelter or a housing solicitor — your rights depend on this classification entirely. Landlords who attempt to use sham licence agreements to avoid statutory protections risk criminal liability and civil claims under the Housing Act 1988.

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