
Will the Renters' Rights Act work or backfire?
From This is Money Podcast by This is Money
May 1, 2026 · 44 min
About this episode
The episode discusses the implications of the new Renters' Rights Act and its potential impact on the rental market.
It's been a long time in the making and the idea has run through successive governments, but a new law to improve the life of those who rent their home has finally kicked in. Whether it's much-needed or much-feared depends what side of the landlord fence you are on, but what's not in doubt is that the Renters' Rights Act is a massive shake-up. The assured shorthold tenancy system that has been the backbone of renting a home for almost 40 years has been torn up and replaced with rolling contracts that tenants can get out of with two months' notice. Landlords, however, will find it much harder to get their property back, put the rent up, or even turn down pets. So, is this what the rental market needs, or is it likely to backfire as some property experts warn? With decades of experience of renting, covering the property market - and even helping with a family business that's involved in it - Georgie Frost, Helen Crane and Simon Lambert dig into the Renters' Rights Act. Plus, on this episode, the Bank of England held rates but could it really need to raise them three times this year and what's behind the rocketing number of 45p taxpayers and why isn't it Rachel Reeves' fault? And…
People in this episode
Hosts: Georgie Frost, Helen Crane, Simon Lambert
Topics covered
- Renters' Rights Act
- property market
- landlord-tenant relations
- Bank of England interest rates
- travel destinations
Keywords
- Renters' Rights Act
- landlords
- tenants
- property market
- Bank of England
- interest rates
- travel
- cheap flights
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Bank of England, Rachel Reeves
Places: Cork, Dortmund, Baden-Baden
More episodes of This is Money Podcast
- House prices vs inflation: The slow motion property slump · June 12, 2026 · 40 min
- The big inheritance shake-up for unmarried couples - and what it means · June 5, 2026 · 53 min
- Would you take a £1m lump sum or £1,000 a week for life? · May 29, 2026 · 40 min
- Are you saving enough for a comfortable retirement? · May 22, 2026 · 50 min
- What does more political chaos mean for your money and the economy? · May 15, 2026 · 49 min
- Should you worry about flights being cancelled and jet fuel shortages? · May 8, 2026 · 49 min
Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the This is Money Podcast podcast page.