Renters' Rights Act 2025, Phase 1 commencement
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England · Possession & eviction

Section 8 Notice Template: The Complete 2026 Guide for UK Landlords

Section 21 is abolished. Section 8 is now the only legal route to possession in England. This guide covers the 2026 Section 8 grounds, the updated prescribed form, and how to serve a valid notice.

10 min readUpdated 17 May 2026Last reviewed: 17 May 2026section 8 notice templatesection 8 notice 2026possession grounds 2026Renters' Rights Act 2026

Section 8 of the Housing Act 1988 allows landlords in England to seek possession of their property where specific statutory grounds are met. With Section 21 abolished from 1 May 2026, Section 8 is now the only legal route to recovering possession of a private rented property in England.

Section 21 is gone

From 1 May 2026, Section 21 'no-fault' evictions are abolished permanently. Every possession claim must cite one of the statutory Section 8 grounds.

What is a Section 8 notice?

A Section 8 notice is a formal written notice served on a tenant, informing them that the landlord intends to apply to court for a possession order. The notice must: (1) state the ground(s) of possession relied on; (2) give the tenant the correct notice period (varies by ground); (3) use the prescribed form (Form 3, updated for 2026); (4) be served correctly, personal service or first-class post.

Section 8 grounds for possession in 2026

Mandatory grounds (court must order possession if proved)

  • Ground 1, Landlord requires property for own occupation: 4 months' notice. From 2026, landlord must have previously occupied as principal home.
  • Ground 1A, Landlord intends to sell (new): 4 months' notice. New ground replacing Section 21 for sales scenarios.
  • Ground 2, Mortgage lender seeking possession: 2 months' notice.
  • Ground 7A, Serious anti-social behaviour or criminal conviction: 1 month's notice.
  • Ground 8, At least 2 months' rent arrears at service and hearing: 4 weeks' notice. Arrears must meet the threshold at both service and court hearing dates.
  • Ground 8A, Three months' serious rent arrears (new): 4 weeks' notice. Cumulative 3-month shortfall at any point during the tenancy.

Discretionary grounds (court has discretion)

  • Ground 10, some rent arrears (below Ground 8 threshold)
  • Ground 11, persistent late payment of rent
  • Ground 12, breach of any tenancy obligation
  • Ground 13, deterioration of the property
  • Ground 14, anti-social behaviour, nuisance, or annoyance
  • Ground 17, false statements made to obtain the tenancy

What changed for Section 8 in 2026?

  • Ground 1A (selling) and Ground 8A (persistent arrears) are entirely new
  • Ground 1 (own occupation) has amended qualifying conditions
  • Ground 7A (anti-social behaviour) has updated criteria
  • Form 3 (the prescribed form) has been updated, using the pre-2026 form risks invalidity
  • No Section 21 alternative, Section 8 is the only statutory possession mechanism

How to serve a valid Section 8 notice

  1. Choose your grounds. You can rely on multiple grounds simultaneously. Use the Section 8 Ground Picker to identify all applicable grounds.
  2. Calculate the correct notice period. Each ground has its own statutory notice period. The expiry date is calculated from the date of service, not the date of writing. Errors in the expiry date invalidate the notice.
  3. Complete the prescribed form (Form 3, 2026 version). Every section must be completed accurately. Errors, including wrong notice periods or missing ground details, can invalidate the notice.
  4. Serve correctly. Personal service (hand to tenant directly, document with photograph or witness) or first-class post (deemed served 2 working days after posting, keep certificate of postage).
  5. Wait for the full notice period to expire. Do not issue court proceedings until the notice period has fully expired. Premature proceedings will be struck out.
  6. Apply to court. Apply to the County Court for a possession order. Mandatory grounds: court must grant if proved. Discretionary grounds: court weighs all circumstances.

Common Section 8 mistakes

  1. Old prescribed form, invalid the moment the 2026 form came into force
  2. Wrong notice period, most common error, especially risky post-2026 ground amendments
  3. Not serving all joint tenants, each named tenant must receive a separate notice
  4. No proof of service, undermines the possession claim if challenged
  5. Arithmetic errors in arrears, Ground 8 requires precise figures at service and hearing dates
  6. Serving before arrears threshold is met, Ground 8 is void if served too early
  7. Issuing proceedings before notice expiry, automatic court strike-out

What the Section 8 Notice Pack includes

LetSafe UK's Section 8 Notice Pack (All Grounds) contains: updated 2026 prescribed form (Form 3) covering all 18 grounds; ground-by-ground plain-English selection guide; notice period reference card; service instructions and certificate of service template; cover letter template; DOCX + PDF format; lifetime re-downloads; 14-day money-back guarantee.

Related guides

See also: <a href="/guides/renters-rights-act-2026">Renters' Rights Act 2026 commencement guide</a> · <a href="/guides/tenancy-agreement-template-uk-2026">UK tenancy agreement template 2026</a>

Templates recommended in this guide

NoticeLS-E-010

Section 8 Notice Pack (All Grounds)

Every mandatory and discretionary ground on the new 2026 list, pre-labelled with the notice period, arrears threshold, and evidence block.

£19
Live now
NoticeLS-E-011

Section 13 Rent Increase Pack

One legitimate rent rise per 12 months. This pack calculates the permitted increase, drafts the notice, and explains the tribunal referral route.

£19
Live now
TenancyLS-E-001

Periodic Assured Tenancy Agreement

The new default English tenancy from 1 May 2026. Periodic from day one, with the prescribed written statement of terms built in. Ships with the Form 4A rent-increase notice template and an Information Sheet delivery acknowledgement form so a buying landlord has every Phase-1 compliance document in one pack.

£29
Live now

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Reply to any LetSafe email or write to Richard@letsafeuk.co.uk. We rewrite guides when we get something wrong, the sooner we hear, the sooner we fix it.

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