Nearly half of tenants face illegal acts from landlords
MORE than four in 10 private renters in England have experienced illegal behaviour from their landlord or letting agent, a survey suggests.
Some 45% of private renters have experienced illegal acts such as entering a home without notice or permission, assault and harassment, according to polling for the charity Shelter.
Extrapolating this using the English Housing Survey, this is the equivalent of 3.7 million people subject to illegal acts, Shelter says.
Some 3,561 private renters were surveyed by YouGov between August 6 and September 7.
A quarter of respondents had experienced an agent or landlord entering their home without notice or permission. More than a fifth (22%) said essential safety or household appliances like smoke alarms, central heating or water supplies were not working when they moved in.
Some 18% said their deposit had not been secured in an approved Government protection scheme, while 9% said they had been assaulted, threatened or harassed.
A further 9% said they had been untreated fairly due to their race, age, nationality, gender, sexual orientation or disability.
And 8% said they had been removed from their home without the proper notice period or without the correct procedures being followed.
Ahead of the Conservative Party conference, Shelter is calling for the Government to better protect renters.
It wants the upcoming Renters’ Reform Bill to include a national landlord register to help regulate the private sector and help renters enforce their rights.
Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said: “Home is everything. Yet millions of private renters across the country don’t feel safe or secure in theirs because of landlords and agents who flout the law.”