Only 153,000 downloads of the Renters’ Rights Act information sheet with 9 days left
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Only 153,000 downloads of the Renters’ Rights Act information sheet with 9 days left
A Freedom of Information response from MHCLG, published last week, revealed that the government’s mandatory Renters’ Rights Act Information Sheet was downloaded just 153,000 times in the first four weeks after publication. There are 2.3 million private landlords in England. Even allowing for agents downloading once and distributing across portfolios, those numbers do not come close to covering the sector.
The deadline to serve this document on every named tenant is 31 May 2026. That is 9 days from today.
What the law requires
The Assured Tenancies (Private Rented Sector) (Written Statement of Terms etc and Information Sheet) (England) Regulations 2026 require landlords to provide every tenant named on an existing written or partly written tenancy agreement with the government’s official Information Sheet by 31 May 2026.
The obligation applies where the tenancy was entered into before 1 May 2026 and has a wholly or partly written record of terms. That includes any standard AST.
If you use a letting agent, the agent is also required to provide the Information Sheet. This is not a substitute for the landlord’s own obligation. It is a parallel one.
For tenancies based entirely on a verbal agreement made before 1 May 2026, the Information Sheet does not apply. Instead, landlords must provide a Written Statement of Terms by the same deadline.
The penalty regime
The penalty for failure is a civil penalty of up to £7,000 per tenancy. The MHCLG statutory guidance sets the starting point at £4,000. Local authorities may adjust depending on severity, compliance history, and whether the landlord gained financially from the failure.
If the breach continues for more than 28 days after a penalty has been issued, it becomes a continuing offence. Further civil penalties of up to £40,000 apply, or the local authority may pursue criminal prosecution. For landlords with multiple properties, the exposure stacks: five tenancies unprovided is a £20,000 starting liability.
The MHCLG guidance explicitly states there is no expectation that councils issue informal warnings before taking formal action.
Why this is not just a fine
Failure to comply with statutory obligations is a factor courts can consider in possession proceedings. If you ever need to recover your property and your compliance record has gaps, a tenant’s legal representative will find them. Walking into a hearing with an unserved Information Sheet is not a position any landlord should want to be in.
If a landlord fails to remedy the breach within 28 days of a civil penalty, tenants or local authorities can apply for a Rent Repayment Order of up to two years’ rent. A single failure will not trigger an RRO on its own, but ignoring the penalty after it lands will.
The Information Sheet takes five minutes to serve. The consequences of not serving it can follow you for years.
The five mistakes that will cost you
- Sending a link instead of the PDF.The government guidance is explicit: a link to the GOV.UK page does not count. The exact PDF must be attached or physically given to the tenant. If you emailed a link in March and assumed you were covered, you are not.
- Serving only the lead tenant on a joint tenancy.There is no legal concept of a “lead tenant.” Every tenant named on the agreement must receive their own copy. If you served one of two named tenants, you have complied for one and breached for the other.
- Using an altered version.The Information Sheet is only valid when downloaded directly from GOV.UK. Reformatting it, converting it to Word, or summarising it in your own words does not satisfy the requirement.
- Assuming your agent has handled it.The landlord’s obligation is separate. Confirm in writing that your agent has served the Information Sheet and ask for evidence.
- Having no proof of service.Serving is one obligation. Proving you served it is another. If a dispute arises in two years, “I’m sure I sent it” is not evidence.
How to serve it and keep proof
Download the exact PDF from GOV.UK: The Renters’ Rights Act Information Sheet 2026. Do not alter it, summarise it, or send a link.
List every named tenant across every current tenancy. Joint tenancies mean multiple names, and every name needs its own copy.
Serve by one of three methods: hand delivery with a signed and dated receipt; recorded delivery; or email with the PDF attached, asking the tenant to confirm receipt by reply.
Record the date, method, and tenant name alongside the evidence of service, and store it somewhere you can find it in two years.
Proof that holds up
If a local authority investigates, you will need to show you served the right document, on the right date, to the right tenant. A confirmation email is good. A signed receipt is better. A screenshot of the sent email with the PDF attached works.
The question is where that proof lives. If it is buried in an email thread you cannot find in 18 months, it is not serving its purpose.
At LLCR, we built the compliance record specifically for this. Email the Information Sheet to your tenant, screenshot the sent email showing the attachment and date, and upload it to LLCR against that tenancy. LLCR keeps a cryptographic record using SHA-256 hashing anchored to a public ledger. The file is timestamped at upload in a way that is independently verifiable and tamper-evident. If the evidence is ever challenged, the hash proves the document existed in that form at that time and has not been altered since.
Not sure whether the Information Sheet is your only gap? LLCR’s free compliance checker runs through every legal requirement for your tenancy in under two minutes.
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The deadline is 31 May. The obligation is not complicated. The consequences of missing it are. If you have already served it and have proof, you are in a stronger position than most of the sector right now. If you have not, 13 days is still enough time.
What method did you use? Did your tenants respond? For those who have not done it yet, what is holding you back?
Tauhid Islam is a property law paralegal. He works on tenancy, possession, and compliance matters daily, and founded LLCR — Landlord Compliance Register to give self-managing landlords in England a single place to track every deadline, certificate, and document the law requires of them.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always seek independent legal advice for your specific situation.
The post Only 153,000 downloads of the Renters’ Rights Act information sheet with 9 days left appeared first on Property118.
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