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How can a landlord give notice to end a tenancy in Wales now that the new laws are in place? The nature of renting means you’ll face it sooner or later.
Whether you’re a new landlord in Anglesey or Gwynedd, or you’ve been in the local private rented sector for years, the Renting Homes (Wales) Act (2016) applies to you. Read on to explore your options.
The new laws came into effect in December 2022, with updated conditions for repossessing your property and new terms to provide clarity. It doesn’t change licensing or registration requirements for Rent Smart Wales, but some landlords may need a training course.
A tenancy is now an occupation contract. Standard contracts have replaced assured shorthold tenancies (introduced by the Housing Act 1988). Landlords are required to issue a written statement to existing tenants within six months from 1 December 2022 – or to issue an occupation contract within 14 days if the tenancy started on or after that date.
Our guide to the new rental regulations can help you – find it here.
Yes, a landlord can still regain possession with a no fault notice under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act (2016). It’s now known as a section 173 notice or Landlord’s Notice for rental properties in Wales.
Landlords in Wales must give six months’ notice to end the contract with a section 173 notice. In most cases, you can only serve it after the first six months of periodic tenancies.
For tenancy contracts signed before 1 December 2022, the two-month notice period for no-fault evictions applies until the end of May 2023. As of 1 June 2023, they will adopt the six-month notice period.
The process and notice period depends on the type of contract and the reason for ending the tenancy. If your property has been abandoned, you can repossess it without needing a court order.
Landlords in Wales can’t typically give notice until a fixed-term tenancy ends. But you can use a break clause if the fixed term is two or more years. In this case, you must give at least six months’ notice from the 18th month of the two-year fixed term contract period.
Landlords can evict a tenant in rent arrears by serving a possession notice stating that the contract holder has broken the agreed terms. The notice period is one month for missed rent payments or 14 days’ notice if the tenants have missed at least two months’ rent.
But take note. You may face challenges if you haven’t followed deposit protection guidelines. Place the tenant’s deposit in a Government-backed tenancy deposit protection scheme within 30 days of receipt to avoid problems.
Your tenants aren’t compelled to pay rent if the property isn’t fit for human habitation. Landlords must also install carbon monoxide alarms and hard-wired smoke and fire alarms; maintain a valid Electrical Installation Condition Report and where applicable a gas safety certificate; and keep the water, gas and electricity supplies in working order and have a valid EPC or exemption. Otherwise, the repossession process could be complicated.
The new legislation takes a no-nonsense approach to antisocial behaviour. All rental contracts must outline behaviour expectations, from disturbing the neighbours with loud noises to domestic abuse and assault.
If your tenant breaches antisocial behaviour rules, you can serve a possession order immediately. Landlords don’t have to wait before starting court proceedings – in this scenario, you can take action the same day.
Contract holders in Wales must give at least four weeks’ notice to end periodic tenancies. They can only end standard fixed-term contracts if a contract holder’s break clause exists, or if both parties agree to an early surrender.
Did we answer your questions about ending a tenancy in Wales? Contact our team to discuss your rental property, we’ll be happy to help.
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