Renters' Rights Act 2025, Phase 1 commencement
Transition readiness pack

England · Greater Manchester · In force May 2026

Stockport Landlord Compliance 2026 — Renters' Rights Act, HMO Licensing and Stockport Council Obligations

Stockport landlords must comply with the full suite of Renters' Rights Act 2025 obligations from 1 May 2026: Section 21 is abolished, all new tenancies must be Periodic Assured Tenancies, and Awaab's Law introduces strict hazard response timeframes. Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council does not currently operate selective or additional licensing beyond mandatory national HMO rules — but every private landlord in Stockport needs to be fully compliant with the national changes.

Stockport is a major Greater Manchester commuter town situated between Manchester city centre and the Peak District, offering private rented sector landlords a market characterised by strong professional tenant demand, lower acquisition costs than central Manchester, and improving amenity following significant town centre regeneration including Stockport Interchange and the Merseyway redevelopment. The town benefits from frequent Avanti and TransPennine rail services to Manchester Piccadilly (under 20 minutes) and solid road links via the M60 and M63.

Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council does not currently operate selective or additional licensing schemes beyond mandatory national HMO licensing. However, all England landlords — including those in Stockport — face significant compliance changes from 1 May 2026 under the Renters' Rights Act 2025.

Renters' Rights Act 2025 — England-wide obligations from 1 May 2026

All Stockport private landlords must comply with these national changes from 1 May 2026:

  • Section 21 abolished: No-fault eviction notices served on or after 1 May 2026 are unlawful. All possession must use Section 8 with a statutory ground from the revised Schedule 2
  • Periodic Assured Tenancy Agreement required: All new tenancies from 1 May 2026 must use a PAT-compliant agreement. Fixed-term ASTs are no longer available for new private residential lettings in England
  • Awaab's Law in force: Mandatory statutory timeframes for responding to, investigating, and repairing damp, mould, and other HHSRS hazards. Landlords face civil penalties for non-compliance
  • Information Sheet obligation: Every landlord with an existing tenancy as at 1 May 2026 must deliver the official RRA 2025 Information Sheet to every named tenant by 31 May 2026. Penalty: up to £7,000 per tenancy
  • Pet request right: Tenants on PATs have the right to request a pet. Landlords must respond in writing within 42 days or consent is deemed given. Unreasonable refusal can result in a civil penalty
  • Civil penalties up to £40,000: The RRA 2025 increases maximum civil penalties for PRS non-compliance to £40,000 per offence for repeated breaches
  • Rent increase via Section 13 only: Rent on a PAT can only be raised via formal Section 13 notice (Form 4A) giving 2 months' advance notice. Contractual rent-review clauses are unenforceable

Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council licensing

Stockport's licensing regime is limited to mandatory national HMO licensing. Understanding what is and is not required protects landlords from unnecessary compliance spend and inadvertent breaches.

  • Mandatory HMO licensing: All properties occupied by 5 or more people forming 2 or more separate households anywhere in Stockport require a mandatory HMO licence under the Housing Act 2004. This applies borough-wide
  • No selective licensing: Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council does not currently operate a selective licensing scheme covering standard private lets. There is no requirement for a licence simply because a property is rented in Stockport
  • No additional HMO licensing: Smaller HMOs (3–4 occupants) do not require an additional licence in Stockport as of June 2026. The national mandatory threshold of 5+ occupants applies
  • Monitor for changes: Licensing designations can be introduced by councils at short notice following statutory consultation. Check the Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council website regularly as the town's regeneration drives additional rental market activity
  • HMO licence conditions: Where mandatory HMO licensing applies, conditions typically cover minimum room sizes (6.51 m² single, 10.22 m² double), fire detection grade, emergency lighting, and gas and electrical safety certificate obligations
  • No-licence consequences: Operating an HMO without a required licence is a criminal offence. Fines of up to £30,000 apply. Unlicensed landlords cannot rely on Ground 8 (rent arrears) and face rent repayment order exposure of up to 12 months' rent

Section 8 possession in Stockport post-May 2026

With Section 21 abolished, Stockport landlords relying on possession must use Section 8 and establish a statutory ground. Key grounds and notice periods:

  • Ground 1A (selling the property): 4 months' notice; 12-month re-letting ban after possession. Cannot be used in the first 12 months of the tenancy
  • Ground 1 (own occupation): 4 months' notice; 12-month re-letting ban. Landlord or close family member moving in as principal home
  • Ground 7A (anti-social behaviour): Immediate notice to 4 weeks depending on severity of ASB conviction or closure order
  • Ground 8 (rent arrears — 3 months+): 4 weeks' notice. Tenant must be at least 3 months in arrears at date of notice and at hearing. A mandatory ground
  • Ground 8A (persistent arrears): New under RRA 2025; applies where rent has been 2+ months in arrears on 3 separate occasions in the preceding 3 years. 4 weeks' notice. Discretionary
  • County Court process: After serving a valid Section 8 notice (Form 3A) and waiting for the notice period, apply to the County Court using Form N5B. Stockport cases are heard at Manchester Civil Justice Centre

Awaab's Law — damp, mould and HHSRS hazards in Stockport

Awaab's Law, extended to the private rented sector by the Renters' Rights Act 2025, imposes mandatory hazard response timeframes. Stockport's older housing stock in certain areas requires particular attention:

  • Emergency hazards: Must be investigated within 24 hours and emergency works begun within 24 hours of investigation
  • Damp and mould: Must be investigated within 14 days; remediation works must begin within 7 days of the investigation report
  • Other non-emergency HHSRS hazards: Investigation within a reasonable time; works completed within 10 weeks
  • Failure to comply: Tenants can complain to the Private Rented Sector Ombudsman, local authority Environmental Health, or apply to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber)
  • Stockport housing stock: Stockport has a mix of older Victorian and inter-war terrace housing particularly in Edgeley, Heaton Chapel, and Reddish, alongside more modern estates. Older properties can be prone to damp — pre-let HHSRS surveys are advisable for properties built before 1980

Stockport rental market — key facts for landlords

Stockport's private rented sector characteristics to factor into compliance and investment planning:

  • Manchester commuter demand: Regular and frequent rail services to Manchester Piccadilly (~20 minutes) and Manchester Airport make Stockport a premium commuter location for Manchester professionals priced out of the city centre
  • Town centre regeneration: The Stockport Interchange transport hub and Merseyway Shopping Centre regeneration are materially improving the town's amenity profile, attracting younger professional tenants and supporting rental demand growth
  • Competitive yields: Gross buy-to-let yields in Stockport typically run 5–7%, materially higher than inner Manchester postcodes while benefiting from the same employment base
  • Peak District proximity: Stockport's position on the edge of the Peak District National Park appeals to outdoor-lifestyle tenants — demand for larger family rentals in areas like Hazel Grove, Bramhall, and Marple is above-average
  • Good schools and family demand: Strong Ofsted-rated schools across the borough support family tenant demand and above-average tenancy length

Compliance documents required for Stockport landlords 2026

Every private landlord letting a property in Stockport must ensure the following documentation is in order:

  • Periodic Assured Tenancy Agreement: All new tenancies from 1 May 2026 require a PAT-compliant tenancy agreement
  • Energy Performance Certificate (EPC): Minimum EPC Band E to let legally. Band C target expected from 2030. Must be given to prospective tenants before agreeing a tenancy
  • Gas Safety Certificate (CP12): Annual inspection by Gas Safe registered engineer. Copy to new tenants before move-in; to existing tenants within 28 days of renewal
  • Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR): Every 5 years. Copy to tenants before tenancy begins or within 28 days of the report
  • Smoke and CO alarms: Working smoke alarm on every floor; CO alarm in every room with a gas appliance or open fire. Test at start of each tenancy
  • How to Rent guide: Current government version served on new tenants at tenancy start
  • Information Sheet: RRA 2025 Information Sheet served on all existing tenants by 31 May 2026

Frequently asked questions

Does the Renters' Rights Act 2025 apply to Stockport landlords?+

Yes. Stockport is in England and all Renters' Rights Act 2025 provisions apply from 1 May 2026, including abolition of Section 21, Periodic Assured Tenancy Agreements for all new lettings, Section 13 rent increases using Form 4A, Awaab's Law hazard response timeframes, and the Information Sheet obligation for all existing tenants (deadline 31 May 2026).

Is there selective licensing in Stockport?+

As of June 2026, Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council does not operate borough-wide selective or additional licensing schemes. Mandatory HMO licensing applies nationally to properties with 5 or more occupants from 2 or more households. Always confirm with Stockport Council before letting, as licensing designations can be introduced at any time following statutory consultation.

What notice period do I need to give a tenant in Stockport to regain possession?+

With Section 21 abolished from 1 May 2026, the notice period depends on the Section 8 ground used. Ground 8 (rent arrears of 3+ months): 4 weeks. Ground 1A (selling): 4 months. Ground 1 (own occupation): 4 months. Ground 7A (ASB): immediate to 4 weeks depending on severity.

Can I still use a fixed-term tenancy agreement in Stockport?+

No. From 1 May 2026, all new private residential tenancies in England (including Stockport) must be Periodic Assured Tenancies from day one. Fixed-term Assured Shorthold Tenancy Agreements are no longer a lawful form for new lets.

Templates you can use today

Editable DOCX + typeset PDF. Reviewed against the current commencement status of the relevant Acts.

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
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