Pass Renters Reform Bill
Conservative · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Pass Renters Reform Bill” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Affordable housing — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Abolishing no-fault evictions and giving tenants the right to challenge unfair rent rises would make renting more secure and fairer, especially for lower-income households. The main risk is that heavier landlord regulation could shrink rental supply, pushing rents up for some.
The evidence
- The policy fully abolishes Section 21 no-fault evictions and strengthens grounds to evict tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “fully abolishing Section 21 evictions while strengthening other grounds for landlords to evict private tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour”
- The stated aim is to deliver fairness in the rental market. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “deliver fairness in the rental market”
- Private rents have grown by 24.2% over three years while nominal wages rose by only 18.6%, creating an average annual affordability gap of £720. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “over the past three years, private rents have grown by 24.2% while nominal wages rose by 18.6%, creating an average annual affordability gap of £720”
- Nearly a quarter of private rented homes — around 1 million properties — do not meet basic decency standards. — gov.uk (media) — “Nearly a quarter (21%) of private rented homes, amounting to 1 million properties, do not meet basic decency standards”
- Abolishing Section 21 is intended to empower tenants to challenge poor conditions or unfair rent increases without fear of retaliatory eviction. — totallandlordinsurance.co.uk (media) — “intended to provide tenants with greater security and stability, empowering them to challenge poor conditions or unfair rent increases without fear of retaliatory eviction”
- Tenants gain the right to challenge above-market rent increases through a First-tier Tribunal at no cost. — totallandlordinsurance.co.uk (media) — “Tenants gain the right to challenge above-market rent increases through a First-tier Tribunal free of charge”
- Blanket bans on renting to benefit claimants or families with children would be made illegal, reducing discrimination against low-income renters. — gov.uk (media) — “It becomes illegal for landlords and agents to impose blanket bans on renting to tenants in receipt of benefits or with children”
- Some landlord groups warn increased regulatory burden could cause landlords to sell up, potentially reducing rental supply and worsening affordability. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “increased regulatory burdens and complexities could lead to some landlords selling their properties, potentially reducing the overall supply of rental homes and exacerbating affordability issues”
- Propertymark has warned that abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm the already backlogged court system, causing longer delays for possession cases. — blog.goodlord.co (media) — “abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm the already backlogged court system, leading to longer delays for possession cases”
- The government itself tied implementation of Section 21 abolition to improvements in court processes, meaning the timeline is uncertain. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the implementation of Section 21 abolition was dependent on improvements to court processes”
- Plans to freeze Local Housing Allowance rates from April 2025 could renew pressure on low-income private renters as rents continue to rise. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “plans to freeze LHA rates from April 2025 onwards could lead to renewed pressure on low-income private renters and an increased risk of eviction as rents continue to rise”
Biggest unknown: Whether increased regulatory burden causes enough landlords to exit the market to reduce rental supply and offset the security gains for existing tenants.
Our reading: The policy's core mechanism — abolishing Section 21 — directly addresses security of tenure, which is a fundamental affordability driver: insecure tenants cannot safely challenge poor conditions or above-market rents without risking eviction. The evidence baseline confirms that rents have outpaced wages by a meaningful margin and that nearly a million private homes fail basic decency standards, so reforms enabling tenants to challenge conditions and rent rises without fear of retaliation are materially relevant to the O1 criteria. The ban on blanket discrimination against benefit claimants and families with children targets a key equity gap for the lowest-income renters. The Tribunal rent-challenge mechanism provides a direct affordability lever for sitting tenants. The risks are real but second-order: supply-side concern from landlord exit is noted by credible analysts, but there is no cited evidence of a large, proven exodus — it remains a projected risk rather than a measured fact, and Resolution Foundation notes difficulty even tracking the trend. Court capacity is a genuine implementation risk that could delay protection for some tenants, and the LHA freeze concern is a separate policy lever that sits outside this bill's scope. On balance, the weight of projected benefit — tenure security, anti-discrimination protections, rent-challenge rights — leans positive for ordinary renters, particularly lower-income ones. The confidence is moderate rather than high because the supply-side and court-capacity risks are credible and could partially offset gains if they materialise.
Crime, justice & national security — Little effect
minor · low confidence
The Bill strengthens landlords' ability to evict tenants for anti-social behaviour, but experts say the change in legal wording is likely negligible in practice and the main bottleneck — slow, backlogged courts — is not resolved by the policy itself. Any safety benefit is real in theory but unlikely to be felt at scale.
The evidence
- The policy strengthens grounds for landlords to evict private tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “strengthening other grounds for landlords to evict private tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour”
- Ground 14 for nuisance has been amended from 'likely to cause' to 'capable of causing' nuisance, lowering the threshold slightly. — lettingshub.co.uk (media) — “Ground 14, for nuisance or annoyance, has been amended from "likely to cause" to "capable of causing" nuisance”
- Critics argue the change in wording for Ground 14 is likely negligible in practice because the primary problem is how long courts take to deal with ASB claims. — lettingshub.co.uk (media) — “the change in wording for Ground 14 from "likely to cause" to "capable of causing" nuisance might be negligible in practice, and the primary issue remains the length of time it takes for courts to deal with such claims”
- Proving anti-social behaviour in court is difficult and time-consuming, as neighbours may be unwilling to provide statements and proceedings can be protracted. — lettingshub.co.uk (media) — “proving anti-social behaviour can be difficult and time-consuming, as neighbours may be unwilling to provide statements, and court proceedings can be protracted and expensive”
- Abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm the already backlogged court system, leading to longer delays for possession cases including ASB ones. — blog.goodlord.co (media) — “abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm the already backlogged court system, leading to longer delays for possession cases”
- Ground 7A for serious offences is retained as a mandatory possession ground. — lettingshub.co.uk (media) — “Ground 7A requires serious offences or breaches of orders”
Biggest unknown: Whether courts are adequately reformed and resourced to process ASB possession cases quickly enough to deliver a meaningful deterrent effect on anti-social behaviour.
Our reading: The O5-relevant mechanism in this policy is the strengthened eviction grounds for anti-social behaviour — specifically the lowered threshold in Ground 14 and the mandatory Ground 7A for serious offences. In theory, faster removal of ASB-causing tenants improves neighbourhood safety and order. However, the evidence does not support a material population-scale effect. Critics with direct legal expertise (E31) assess the wording change in Ground 14 as likely negligible in practice. The real constraint is court speed: proving ASB requires witness cooperation and court time, both of which are in short supply (E11). Moreover, abolishing Section 21 may add pressure to an already backlogged court system (E29), potentially making ASB possession cases slower rather than faster. The policy does not include any committed mechanism to expand court capacity or speed up ASB proceedings. Absent that, the improvement in the legal standard is real but unlikely to translate into materially faster or more frequent ASB evictions at population scale. The direction is therefore scored as negligible rather than an improvement: the policy points in the right direction on this indicator but the mechanism is not evidenced to fire at the scale needed to move crime or ASB rates measurably.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Helps
minor · moderate confidence
The policy bans landlords from refusing to rent to people on benefits or with children, and removes the threat of 'no-fault' eviction that can be used to silence tenants who complain. The main caveat is that the fine for discrimination may be too low to deter it, and overloaded courts could slow down the new protections in practice.
The evidence
- The policy commits to fully abolishing Section 21 no-fault evictions. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “fully abolishing Section 21 evictions”
- The policy strengthens grounds for evicting tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “strengthening other grounds for landlords to evict private tenants guilty of anti-social behaviour”
- Abolishing Section 21 is intended to let tenants challenge poor conditions or unfair rent increases without fear of retaliatory eviction. — totallandlordinsurance.co.uk (media) — “empowering them to challenge poor conditions or unfair rent increases without fear of retaliatory eviction”
- The Bill makes it illegal for landlords and agents to impose blanket bans on renting to tenants on benefits or with children. — gov.uk (media) — “It becomes illegal for landlords and agents to impose blanket bans on renting to tenants in receipt of benefits or with children”
- Tenants gain the right to challenge above-market rent increases through a First-tier Tribunal at no cost. — totallandlordinsurance.co.uk (media) — “Tenants gain the right to challenge above-market rent increases through a First-tier Tribunal free of charge”
- The £7,000 fine for discriminating against benefit tenants or families with children is considered too low to deter discrimination, and proving intent remains difficult. — rentersreformcoalition.co.uk (media) — “The £7,000 fine for discriminating against tenants on benefits or with children is considered too low by some to be a strong deterrent, especially as proving intent to discriminate remains difficult”
- Abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm already backlogged courts, causing delays that undermine the new due-process protections. — blog.goodlord.co (media) — “abolishing Section 21 could overwhelm the already backlogged court system, leading to longer delays for possession cases”
Biggest unknown: Whether the £7,000 fine and difficult burden of proof for discriminatory intent will make the ban on benefit/children blanket-bans enforceable in practice.
Our reading: O9 covers equal treatment and anti-discrimination, minority protections, and due process. This policy makes two direct contributions. First, it bans blanket discriminatory refusals to rent to benefit claimants or families with children — a concrete equal-treatment measure targeting a documented category of housing discrimination. Second, abolishing Section 21 removes the mechanism landlords can use to evict tenants in retaliation for asserting their rights (challenging conditions, complaining about repairs), which in practice has a chilling effect on equal access to due process for tenants in weaker bargaining positions. The free tribunal right to challenge above-market rent increases further strengthens procedural equality. Against this, the anti-discrimination provision has a credibility problem: critics note the £7,000 fine is modest and proving discriminatory intent is hard, so deterrence is uncertain. On due process, the court system is already backlogged and a surge in Section 8 proceedings (replacing Section 21) without court reform could slow resolution of legitimate cases and reduce practical access to justice. The government itself has acknowledged court readiness is a precondition. On balance, the direction is a genuine improvement on O9's indicators — anti-discrimination protections are extended and retaliatory eviction is formally eliminated — but the magnitude is minor because enforcement gaps and court capacity constrain the real-world effect. Both improvements are contingent on implementation quality rather than the policy text alone.