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Landlords will welcome a new slant on the rules that apply to notices terminating assured shorthold tenancies

Most residential tenancies granted in the private sector today are assured shorthold tenancies and are usually granted for an initial fixed term. When the tenancy ends, the parties may choose to end the arrangement, to renew the tenancy for a further fixed term, or to allow the tenancy to continue as a statutory periodic tenancy – in which case, the length of each subsequent period of the tenancy will be determined by when rent was paid under the original fixed term agreement. For example, if the rent was payable monthly on the first day of each calendar month, the statutory tenancy will be a monthly periodic tenancy in which each new period commences on the first day of every month.


Where a tenant does not wish to quit at the end of a fixed or periodic term, a valid notice is essential. The rules that apply in such cases are set out in section 21 of the Housing Act 1988. The section provides that assured shorthold tenancies can be brought to an end by at least two months’ notice. However, it has always been thought that section 21(1)(b) notices, which do not need to specify an end date, are for use by landlords wishing to terminate fixed term assured shorthold tenancies when they expire. By contrast, it was believed that notices to terminate contractual or statutory periodic tenancies must comply with section 21(4). This subsection requires landlords to specify an end date that coincides with the last day of a tenancy period (which reflects the common law rules that apply to notices to quit).

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