Overview

If you are a landlord in England, you must not do anything to make a tenant less likely to rent a property (or prevent them from renting it) because they have children or get benefits. This is called ‘rental discrimination’.

This includes anyone acting on your behalf, like letting agents, referencing services, friends or family members.

Any part of a tenancy agreement, mortgage or superior lease that could be used to discriminate is not valid and cannot be enforced.

You can be fined up to £7,000 for each offence.

There’s different guidance if you’re:

There’s guidance on the Shelter website if tenants think they’re being discriminated against for other reasons. For example, because they’re disabled or a woman.

What counts as rental discrimination

Rental discrimination can happen when:

  • someone is looking for somewhere to rent
  • a tenant’s circumstances change - for example, they have a child or start claiming benefits
  • a tenant is renting a property that you have chosen to sell

It can include:

  • not letting someone access information about a property
  • stopping someone from viewing a property
  • refusing to let someone rent a property

It’s still rental discrimination if you treat someone unfairly based on something that is not true, for example if you think someone has children when they do not.

Accessing information

Information can include:

  • the availability of the property
  • the date it becomes vacant
  • details of the property, such as the size, location or number of bedrooms

Viewing a property

This can include refusing to let someone view the property or knowingly making it difficult for them to view it, such as by offering unreasonable times.

Renting a property

This can include poor treatment to make it less likely for someone to want to rent the property, for example a rental agreement that puts the tenant at a disadvantage.

Exceptions

There are some exceptions when you may be able to stop someone from renting a property if they: