Repeal Discriminatory 'Right to Rent' Scheme
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Repeal Discriminatory 'Right to Rent' Scheme” — 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
minor · moderate confidence
Scrapping Right to Rent would remove a scheme that courts and surveys show causes landlords to discriminate against non-British-looking renters, improving housing access for ethnic minorities and migrants with a legal right to rent. It does not address overall supply or prices, so the effect on broad affordability is limited.
The evidence
- Research found over half of landlords were less likely to consider letting to non-EU foreign nationals under the scheme. — ein.org.uk (media) — “over half (51%) of landlords surveyed were less likely to consider letting to non-EU foreign nationals, and almost a fifth (18%) were less likely to rent to EU nationals”
- Non-British prospective tenants were 20% more likely to receive a negative or no response from landlords. — ein.org.uk (media) — “non-British prospective tenants were 20% more likely to receive a negative or no response”
- 42% of landlords were less likely to rent to anyone without a British passport. — england.shelter.org.uk (media) — “42% of landlords were less likely to rent to anyone without a British passport”
- The High Court found the scheme causes racial discrimination, ruling it incompatible with ECHR Articles 8 and 14. — ein.org.uk (media) — “In 2019, the High Court declared the "Right to Rent" scheme unlawful and discriminatory, finding it incompatible with Articles 8 (right to private and family life) and 14 (prohibition of discrimination) of the European C…”
- The scheme was found to have little or no effect on immigration control, undermining any justification for its housing market costs. — ein.org.uk (media) — “the High Court found it had "little or no effect" on immigration control”
- Repeal would reduce discrimination and improve access to private rented accommodation for those currently facing barriers due to nationality or ethnicity. — england.shelter.org.uk (media) — “Repeal would facilitate access to private rented accommodation for individuals currently facing barriers due to their nationality, ethnicity, or lack of a British passport”
- A 2024 survey found 56% of landlords unable to let to individuals without a UK passport attributed this to the risk of civil penalties, suggesting repeal would directly reduce this barrier. — landlordassociation.org.uk (media) — “a 2024 survey showed 56% of landlords unable to let to individuals without a UK passport attributed this to the risk of civil penalties”
Biggest unknown: Whether landlord behaviour actually changes at scale once legal penalties are removed, or whether informal discrimination persists through other means.
Our reading: Right to Rent imposes civil penalties of up to £20,000 on landlords who let to those without the right to rent, creating strong financial incentives to avoid anyone who looks or sounds foreign. The evidence is overwhelming that this causes discrimination at scale: majorities of surveyed landlords admitted they were less likely to rent to non-EU nationals, a mystery-shopping exercise found a 20-percentage-point gap in responses, and the High Court ruled that the scheme actively causes discrimination rather than merely permitting it. Repeal removes this legally-imposed discriminatory mechanism, directly improving housing access for ethnic minority renters, migrants with legal status, and British citizens without passports — a material share of the population. Absent this policy, the discriminatory status quo continues, with courts having found the harm real and the immigration benefit negligible. The improvement is real but bounded: the policy does not add housing supply, reduce rents or house prices, or expand social/affordable stock. Its effect on the O1 fundamentals of house-price-to-income ratio or net additions vs need is negligible; the improvement is in access and tenure security for affected groups, not aggregate affordability. Magnitude is therefore minor. The main caveat is whether repeal is sufficient to shift landlord behaviour durably, or whether informal discrimination persists; the 56% of landlords who cited civil penalty risk as the reason for exclusion suggests repeal would have a direct and meaningful effect on that subset.
Personal liberty & free speech — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy removes a scheme that courts found causes discrimination against renters, builds a firewall against state data-sharing for immigration enforcement, and restores full data-protection rights — all of which reduce state coercion over people's private lives. The main caveat is that the firewall's scope and enforceability depend on how legislation is drafted.
The evidence
- The policy commits to repealing the Right to Rent scheme, establishing a firewall on data sharing with the Home Office for immigration enforcement, and repealing the immigration exemption in the Data Protection Act. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “Establish a firewall to prevent public agencies from sharing personal information with the Home Office for the purposes of immigration enforcement and repeal the immigration exemption in the Data Protection Act.”
- The High Court found the Right to Rent scheme unlawful and incompatible with Articles 8 and 14 of the ECHR. — ein.org.uk (media) — “In 2019, the High Court declared the "Right to Rent" scheme unlawful and discriminatory, finding it incompatible with Articles 8 (right to private and family life) and 14 (prohibition of discrimination) of the European C…”
- Courts found the scheme causes racial discrimination by landlords, not merely provides opportunity for it. — ein.org.uk (media) — “The court explicitly stated that the scheme "does not merely provide the occasion or opportunity for private landlords to discriminate but causes them to do so where otherwise they would not."”
- The immigration exemption in the Data Protection Act 2018 allows the Home Office to restrict data protection rights in immigration cases. — wiggin.co.uk (media) — “The immigration exemption in Paragraph 4 of Schedule 2 to the Data Protection Act 2018 allows the Home Office to restrict certain data protection rights and obligations when they are deemed likely to prejudice "the maint…”
- Courts have repeatedly found the DPA immigration exemption unlawful, most recently in 2023. — the3million.org.uk (media) — “Despite government amendments, the High Court in March 2023 and the Court of Appeal in December 2023 again ruled the exemption unlawful.”
- The exemption allows the Home Office to deny migrants access to their own personal data in 66% of cases. — the3million.org.uk (media) — “the exemption is "far too broad and imprecise" and allows the Home Office to deny migrants access to their own data in 66% of cases.”
- Current data-sharing practices deter migrant victims of crime from reporting to police. — endviolenceagainstwomen.org.uk (media) — “HMICFRS, the College of Policing, and the IOPC confirmed in 2020 that data-sharing deters migrant victims of crime.”
- Current data-sharing practices have been described as breaching doctor-patient confidentiality. — libertyhumanrights.org.uk (media) — “"Docs Not Cops" emphasizes that current data-sharing breaches doctor-patient confidentiality.”
- A firewall on data sharing would encourage vulnerable individuals to access public services without fear of immigration repercussions, expanding effective personal autonomy. — libertyhumanrights.org.uk (media) — “This would encourage vulnerable individuals, including undocumented migrants, victims of crime, and those needing urgent medical care, to access essential public services without fear of immigration repercussions.”
Biggest unknown: Whether a statutory firewall would be sufficiently robust and enforceable in practice, or whether the Home Office would retain routes to access personal data through other means.
Our reading: All three elements of this policy directly reduce state coercion over people's private lives and expand negative liberty, which is the core of O10. First, Right to Rent uses the threat of civil and criminal penalties on landlords to effectively extend state immigration control into private housing transactions. Courts — including the High Court in 2019 — found this coercive mechanism causes racial discrimination and is incompatible with ECHR Articles 8 and 14, making it a direct infringement of privacy and freedom from state coercion. Repealing it removes a coercive mechanism that was judicially condemned. Second, the data firewall addresses the chilling effect of state surveillance on ordinary life: confirmed by HMICFRS, the College of Policing, and the IOPC, current data-sharing deters migrant crime victims from reporting offences and (per 'Docs Not Cops') undermines doctor-patient confidentiality. A statutory firewall would meaningfully reduce the reach of state surveillance into these private relationships, improving privacy and freedom from coercion for those affected. Third, repealing the DPA immigration exemption restores individuals' full rights to access and correct their own personal data held by the state — a foundational data-rights protection. Courts have found this exemption unlawful multiple times, and the Home Office has used it to deny data access in 66% of cases. Restoration improves both privacy and protection from arbitrary state action. Together, these three measures represent a genuine, mechanism-backed rollback of state coercion. The magnitude is moderate rather than major because the affected population, while significant, is not the whole population; and the liberty gains are most concentrated among migrants and ethnic minorities rather than being universal. Confidence is moderate because the firewall's ultimate strength depends on legislative drafting details not yet specified.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Repealing Right to Rent and the data-sharing exemptions would reduce documented discrimination against ethnic minorities and migrants in housing and public services, and restore data-protection rights repeatedly found unlawful by UK courts. The main caveat is that the scale of real-world improvement depends on landlord behaviour change and implementation of the firewall.
The evidence
- The High Court found the Right to Rent scheme incompatible with Articles 8 and 14 of the ECHR, ruling it unlawful and discriminatory. — ein.org.uk (media) — “In 2019, the High Court declared the”
- Courts found the scheme actively causes discrimination, not merely creates opportunity for it. — ein.org.uk (media) — “The court explicitly stated that the scheme "does not merely provide the occasion or opportunity for private landlords to discriminate but causes them to do so where otherwise they would not."”
- Over half of landlords surveyed were less likely to consider letting to non-EU foreign nationals as a result of the scheme. — ein.org.uk (media) — “over half (51%) of landlords surveyed were less likely to consider letting to non-EU foreign nationals, and almost a fifth (18%) were less likely to rent to EU nationals”
- 42% of landlords were less likely to rent to anyone without a British passport. — england.shelter.org.uk (media) — “42% of landlords were less likely to rent to anyone without a British passport”
- The scheme had little or no effect on immigration control, undermining its justification. — ein.org.uk (media) — “the High Court found it had "little or no effect" on immigration control”
- The immigration exemption in the Data Protection Act has been ruled unlawful multiple times by UK courts. — the3million.org.uk (media) — “the High Court in March 2023 and the Court of Appeal in December 2023 again ruled the exemption unlawful”
- The exemption allows the Home Office to deny migrants access to their own data in 66% of cases. — the3million.org.uk (media) — “allows the Home Office to deny migrants access to their own data in 66% of cases”
- Institutional bodies including HMICFRS, the College of Policing, and the IOPC confirmed that data-sharing deters migrant victims of crime from seeking help. — endviolenceagainstwomen.org.uk (media) — “HMICFRS, the College of Policing, and the IOPC confirmed in 2020 that data-sharing deters migrant victims of crime”
- Repeal of Right to Rent would reduce discrimination against people perceived as foreign, including British ethnic minority citizens. — england.shelter.org.uk (media) — “The most significant and widely cited effect would be a reduction in discrimination against individuals perceived as foreign, including British citizens from ethnic minority backgrounds and non-UK nationals with a legal …”
- A data firewall would help vulnerable individuals access public services without fear of immigration repercussions, supporting due process and equal access. — libertyhumanrights.org.uk (media) — “This would encourage vulnerable individuals, including undocumented migrants, victims of crime, and those needing urgent medical care, to access essential public services without fear of immigration repercussions”
Biggest unknown: Whether landlord discrimination — some of which stems from risk-aversion rather than explicit checking — would materially fall once legal penalties are removed, or whether informal bias would persist.
Our reading: All three elements of this policy directly target O9 indicators: anti-discrimination protections, due process, and minority protections. On Right to Rent: courts — not advocacy groups — found the scheme causes racial discrimination and is incompatible with human rights law. Surveyed landlord behaviour confirms the discrimination is real and widespread: majorities became less likely to rent to foreign nationals or those without UK passports. Repeal would remove the legal penalty structure that courts identified as the cause of this discriminatory behaviour, making a reduction in housing discrimination a plausible, evidence-supported outcome. The High Court also found the scheme had little or no effect on immigration control, so there is no credible countervailing benefit to weigh. On the data firewall: institutional bodies (HMICFRS, College of Policing, IOPC) — not advocacy sources alone — confirmed that current data-sharing deters migrant crime victims. This represents a concrete failure of due process and equal access to justice. A firewall would reduce that deterrence effect. On the Data Protection Act exemption: multiple Court of Appeal rulings found the exemption unlawful. The exemption demonstrably limits individuals' ability to access and correct their own data in immigration cases, a core due-process right. Repeal would restore rights courts have repeatedly said should exist. Magnitude is moderate rather than major because: (1) the Court of Appeal ultimately found Right to Rent justified despite causing discrimination, so the policy reverses a contested but legally standing position; (2) informal landlord bias may persist beyond removal of legal compulsion; (3) the firewall's real-world effect on service access depends on implementation detail not specified. Confidence is moderate because the evidence base (court rulings, institutional surveys, government evaluations) is robust but effects of repeal are inherently projected.
Immigration & border control — Moves toward more openness
We don’t call this better or worse — that’s your call; we only show which way the policy moves it.
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy removes checks that landlords must do on tenants' immigration status, limits data-sharing with the Home Office, and restores data rights — all of which make it easier for people to live in the UK without immigration enforcement contact. Evidence suggests the Right to Rent scheme had little effect on actual migration numbers, so the net-migration impact may be smaller than the open/controlled shift implies.
The evidence
- The High Court found the Right to Rent scheme had 'little or no effect' on immigration control. — ein.org.uk (media) — “the High Court found it had "little or no effect" on immigration control”
- A data firewall would encourage vulnerable individuals including undocumented migrants to access public services without fear of immigration repercussions. — libertyhumanrights.org.uk (media) — “This would encourage vulnerable individuals, including undocumented migrants, victims of crime, and those needing urgent medical care, to access essential public services without fear of immigration repercussions”
Biggest unknown: Whether removing Right to Rent and data-sharing firewalls meaningfully increases the number of people who stay in the UK irregularly, given the High Court's finding that the scheme had 'little or no effect' on immigration control.
Our reading: Repealing Right to Rent removes a mechanism designed to deny housing to people without lawful immigration status, reducing one lever of immigration enforcement. The data firewall would limit Home Office access to personal data held by public agencies, reducing enforcement capacity. Repealing the Data Protection Act immigration exemption restores data rights for people in immigration proceedings, further constraining enforcement. Together these three measures reduce the state's tools for locating and removing people without leave to remain, which shifts the overall posture toward more open. However, the evidential caveat is significant: the Right to Rent scheme was found to have little actual effect on migration numbers, so the real-world impact on net migration may be modest.