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May 1 2026 - Renters' Right Act Commencement Day

You have 0 days to:

Serve any final Section 21 notices

Stop accepting above-asking rent offers

Prepare for the rental bidding ban

Remove “No DSS” from adverts

Remove “No Children” from listings

Show one clear rent price

Stop using fixed-term agreements

Switch to periodic tenancy templates

Check which tenancies go periodic

Stop taking rent before signing

Take no more than one month’s rent

Move all evictions to Section 8

Train staff on new notice rules

Create Section 13 process flow

Add two months to rent reviews

File court claims for Section 21s

Update landlord move-in grounds

Update landlord selling grounds

Send the RRA Information Sheet

Create written terms where missing

Update How to Rent processes

Review tenant screening questions

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Stop backdating rent increases

Discuss rent protection backbooks

Act now before it is too late...

Rental market cools after record-breaking summer

Rents dropped 2% in September after a record-breaking August, while voids increased to 16 days. Year on year, rents are up 2.1%.

The Goodlord team

Sep 30, 2025

The rental market across England is finally showing signs of cooling following a summer in which a range of rental records were broken.

According to the latest Goodlord Rental Index - the market’s most definitive analysis of confirmed tenancy data - month-on-month rents dipped during September, and year-on-year rent inflation continues to slow. Across the country, voids increased in the majority of regions as the market heads into what is traditionally a quieter season for lettings. 

Rents cool off after huge summer spikes

Rents were down during September, dropping by an average of 2% across England. The new rental average is £1,447, down from August’s figure of £1,480. 

The biggest regional shifts were seen in the North East and the East Midlands, where prices dropped by a significant 8%. This was followed by a 7% reduction in the South West. 

Two regions bucked the trend, however. Greater London saw prices rise by over 6% during September - potentially driven by an influx of students and new graduates to the capital. The West Midlands also saw a marginal rent rise, with prices up by 1%.

Rents up 2% annually as inflation pace reduces

Compared to the same time last year, rents are now 2.1% higher year-on-year. In September 2024, tenants were paying £1,417 per property on average. This September, that had risen to £1,447 per month. 

Year-on-year, rents are higher in all regions except for the South East, which saw a very slight reduction in average costs during September - down 0.6%. Elsewhere, rents are up in all regions - ranging from 1.4% rises (seen in the West Midlands) to increases of 3.8% (recorded in Greater London). 

Throughout 2025 to date, the pace of rental inflation has been steadily decreasing. This month’s 2.1% rise contrasts starkly with January’s 4.6%, further highlighting that the era of dramatically escalating prices could be behind us.

Voids lengthen in September

Reflecting the reduction in rents, voids lengthened in September. Average void periods - the length of a time a property is vacant between tenancies - are now 16 days across England, up from 15 days in August. 

This means voids are slightly longer than they were at the same time last year. In September 2024, voids sat at 15 days. 

Only two regions saw a shortening of void periods in September. Greater London saw voids drop from 12 days down to 10. And the North West saw voids reduce from 21 days to 17 - a 20% shift.

Tenants see salary boost in September

There was better salary news for tenants this month. During September, the average salary of a renter signing a new tenancy agreement was up by 2.3% compared to August. Salary averages increased from £37,584 in August to £38,466 in September. This is also 3% higher year-on-year compared to September 2024. 

Overall, it means salary rises are currently modestly outpacing both monthly and year-on-year rental cost rises across the UK.

William Reeve, CEO at Goodlord, comments:

“As predicted, this month’s data shows the first signs of a market cooling off following an intense summer of record breaking rents. Prices are down over the previous month and annual rental inflation also continues to slow. Together, along with lengthening voids, these numbers indicate a lettings market starting to slow down for winter. 

“However, with the Renter’s Rights Bill now just weeks away from becoming law, a large number of new variables are able to hit the market; from bans on tenants over-bidding, to the ability for landlords to increase rents just once a year. These new factors will undoubtedly impact the market, meaning a new era of less predictable market patterns could soon be upon us.”

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