Prove your right to rent in England

Skip contents

Overview

Before you can rent in England, you need to prove your right to rent to your landlord.

How you prove your right to rent depends on your nationality and your immigration status.

You do not need to prove your right to rent in Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland.

If you’re a British or Irish citizen

If you’re a British or Irish citizen, you can prove your right to rent in England by showing your landlord one of the following:

  • a British passport (current or expired)
  • an Irish passport or passport card (current or expired)
  • a certificate of registration or naturalisation as a British citizen

If you do not have a passport, passport card or citizenship certificate, you may be able to use other documents to prove your right to rent.

You may be able to use an online identity service provider (IDSP) to prove your right to rent instead of giving your landlord your documents to check. Ask your landlord if they offer this.

If you’re not a British or Irish citizen

If you’re not a British or Irish citizen, you can prove your right to rent in England with:

You can choose which option you use. Your landlord cannot reject your application because you gave them an eligible immigration document instead of a share code, for example.

If you have the right of abode in the UK

People with the right of abode are:

  • British and Irish citizens
  • some Commonwealth citizens

You can use a certificate of entitlement to prove your right to rent, if you have one. This can be:

  • a vignette sticker in your passport
  • a digital certificate in your UKVI account - you’ll need to get a share code online

If you cannot prove your right to rent

If you’re not a British or Irish citizen, your landlord can ask for a Home Office right to rent check to see if you can rent in England.

If you’re a Commonwealth citizen, you may be able to get documents to show that you can rent in the UK through the Windrush Scheme.