🏠 For landlords

Why landlords use AgreeRent

The Renters' Rights Act 2025 changed the maths. Professional evidence and structured process are no longer optional — they're how you protect your yield and stay compliant.

The new economics of rent increases

Before May 2026, a rent increase was usually quiet. The landlord wrote, the tenant paid, life moved on. The Renters' Rights Act changed that: every tenant now has access to a £47 tribunal that can — and does — knock increases down to the market median.

The successful landlord post-RRA doesn't avoid the rules. They master them: serving the right notice, with the right evidence, on the right schedule. That's what AgreeRent automates.

The new maths

What the Act actually changed for landlords.

£47
Tribunal fee for tenants
6–9 months
Average tribunal wait
3 days
Average resolution time

Three things AgreeRent fixes

Most landlords lose at tribunal because of process failures, not market evidence. We close every gap.

Form 4A auto-generated

One procedural error voids the entire notice and resets the clock. AgreeRent checks every field — notice period, eligibility, correct form version — before issuing.

FTT bundle always ready

If a tenant challenges, your evidence pack is already compiled and tribunal-formatted. No last-minute scramble — your case is already won before the hearing.

Ombudsman-ready now

The PRS Landlord Ombudsman (Phase 2, late 2026) requires documented dispute resolution. Every AgreeRent case generates the audit trail automatically.

Coming late 2026: the PRS Landlord Ombudsman will require every landlord to demonstrate a documented dispute resolution process. Every AgreeRent case generates the tamper-evident audit trail the Ombudsman will look for.

Ready to start?

Open a case and we'll handle the Form 4A, the evidence, and the negotiation portal — all for £220.

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Why landlords use AgreeRent · AgreeRent