Section 21 Is Ending
From 1 May 2026, the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 abolishes Section 21 “no-fault” eviction notices in England.
For landlords, this is a fundamental change.
For us, it’s business as usual.
Section 21 Is Gone — Possession Is Not
The abolition of Section 21 does not mean landlords lose the right to recover possession.
It means possession must now be:
- Ground-based
- Evidence-driven
- Procedurally exact
Get it wrong, and cases fail.
Get it right, and possession remains achievable.
We Are Ahead of the Renters’ Rights Act
While others are still catching up, we have been advising landlords on post-Section 21 strategy well in advance of commencement.
We know:
- Which new grounds for possession work
- Where claims will fall apart
- How courts are likely to apply the Act
- What evidence actually wins cases
This is not theory. It’s specialist practice.
Why Landlords Trust Us
We are specialist landlord and tenant solicitors.
This is all we do.
That means:
- No guesswork
- No generic advice
- No costly mistakes
When the law changes, specialism matters.
What We Can Help With
- Possession strategy without Section 21
- Selecting and proving the correct statutory grounds
- Evidence preparation under the new legal thresholds
- Preventing problems before they arise
- Ongoing compliance with the Renters’ Rights Act regime
Section 21 Is Over. We’re Ready.
If you want clarity, confidence and control under the new law, speak to solicitors who are already operating in the post-Section 21 landscape.

