I proprietari che sfrattano gli inquilini prima della legge per impedire la pratica entrano in vigore in Inghilterra

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2026/apr/08/landlords-no-fault-evictions-tenants-renters-rights-bill-law?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

di topotaul

10 commenti

  1. mrblobbysknob on

    They allowed way too long a lead for this law coming into force. The sheer noise of landlord whining and subsequently allowing them to evict because of the law change is terrible.

  2. Very Guardian article. The Headline implies a mass trend, whereas evidence is mostly anecdotes and activist-group claims, then padded out with emotive stories to push the reader toward a conclusion.

  3. And yet, according to the mortgage and landlord possession statistics, actual possession claims have fallen in the run up to the new laws. It’s just possession claims that are tracked officially, rather than notices, but really strongly suggests this isn’t happening.

  4. KlownKar on

    If they’re evicting people before the deadline, they were planning to evict them anyway.

  5. anonnymouse2025 on

    Funny, any time I said this would happen, left-wing redditors told me I was a Tory.

  6. Krabsandwich on

    Just a personal perspective my Daughter is renting at the moment but has decided to buy with her boyfriend (about bloody time). Her landlord who has been pretty decent on the whole is asking her to stay longer and is in no hurry to get possession.

    Lots of her mates are in the rental market and according to her no one is getting evicted it seems if Landlords get reasonable tenants they like to hang on to them.

  7. Daver7692 on

    Landlords try not to be the most subhuman cunts on the planet challenge: impossible.

  8. Particular_Tough4860 on

    Too many households and not enough houses – that’s the problem. Blaming landlords was never going to solve this imbalance.

    We see it playing out here. First anger that landlords are acting as parasites. As laws come into force to push the parasites out of the market, now people are complaining that they are leaving.

    If there was sufficient houses, none of this would be a problem.

  9. To anyone facing this just don’t leave but keep paying your rent, the court process takes forever and you can legally stay there during the process. Its not a get out of jail free card as it is likely that they will be able to continue but just make it awkward for them. Worst case you get another 6 months to find somewhere else, best case they messed something minor up on the paperwork and will need to restart under the new rules.

    https://england.shelter.org.uk/housing_advice/eviction/section_21_eviction/staying_after_a_section_21_notice

  10. Rockky67 on

    Buying a house right now (to live in!) which a landlord is selling and the reason they gave for selling was not to do with lack of control over evictions it is specifically the need to have a C or better EPC rating under the new tenancy regulations. It’s a Victorian era property (bakery converted into a small detached house 25 years ago) and they said to get from current D rating to C could cost a lot of money.

    As someone who has rented 30 odd years of my life I would say these new regulations may cause short term pain in the rental market but are needed going forwards to stop abuse.

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