Buy to Let in 2026: Navigating the New Landscape After the Renters’ Rights Act

The UK private rental sector has entered a new era. With the Renters’ Rights Act now in force, the rules of the game have changed and for landlords willing to adapt, the opportunities ahead are significant.

Understanding what this landmark legislation means for tenants, and in turn for landlords, is the first step to thriving in a market that continues to reward those who approach it with professionalism and purpose.

What the Act Means for Renters

At its heart, the Renters’ Rights Act is about security. It represents the biggest reform of the private rented sector in 40 years, and its changes are sweeping. The most notable shift is the abolition of Section 21 “no-fault” evictions. Tenants can no longer be asked to leave their home without a valid legal reason, something that had long been a major source of housing insecurity and, in many cases, a driver of homelessness.

Alongside this, fixed-term tenancies have been replaced by rolling periodic tenancies. This gives renters the freedom to move when their circumstances change, without being locked into agreements that may no longer serve them.

Rent increases are now limited to once per year, and landlords must provide at least two months’ notice before any increase takes effect and they must reflect genuine local market rates. Where a tenant believes an increase is unfair, they now have a clearer route to challenge it through a tribunal.

For the 11 million people renting privately in England, these changes offer a meaningfully fairer deal.

What This Means for Landlords

The changes are substantial, but they are not the threat that some have feared. Rather, they represent a professionalisation of the sector and one that many established landlords have long welcomed.

Eviction through Section 8 grounds remains available where tenants are in rent arrears, have breached their tenancy agreement, or where a landlord genuinely needs the property back for sale or personal use.

What the legislation does demand is that landlords operate with greater structure and transparency. Tenancy agreements need reviewing, safety and compliance documentation must be kept current, and communication with tenants should be proactive. A new Private Rented Sector Ombudsman will handle disputes with legally binding decisions making clear, documented landlord-tenant relationships more important than ever.

For those who have always run their portfolios professionally, little will feel dramatically different. For those who haven’t, now is the ideal moment to reset.

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The Next Six Months: Reasons for Optimism

The short-term outlook for buy to let landlords is encouraging. Rental yields hit a record high of 6.6% at the end of 2025, with 89% of surveyed landlords reporting profitability. Average UK gross yields sit at 6.3%, rising to 8.1% in parts of the North East. These are figures that speak to the continued income-generating power of well-chosen rental properties.

Demand for rental homes remains robust. Supply constraints in many cities and commuter towns continue to underpin strong occupancy rates, and with rent growth forecast at around 2.5%, the market offers a stable, dependable income stream. Longer term, industry forecasts project UK rents rising by 12% between 2026 and 2030.

Perhaps most encouragingly, some landlords choosing to exit the market in the wake of legislative change are creating real opportunities for buyers. Properties offered at a discount, particularly in high-demand areas, represent a genuine opening for investors prepared to move decisively.

The era of the passive landlord may be over, but for those who approach buy to let as the structured, professional investment it truly is, the next six months and beyond look bright.

Keen to get started? Speak to our expert advisers today.

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