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HMO licensing in 2026: does your rental property need a licence?

Updated July 2026 · Applies to England · 6 minute read

If you let a shared house or a converted flat to unrelated tenants, you may need a licence before you can legally operate it. The rules that decide whether a property is a house in multiple occupation (HMO) have not changed under the Renters' Rights Act, but the cost of getting them wrong has gone up sharply since 1 May 2026. Operating an unlicensed HMO can now mean a civil penalty of up to £40,000, on top of a rent repayment order worth up to two years' rent. This guide sets out what counts as an HMO, which licence applies to you, the national minimum standards every licensed HMO must meet, and what happens if you skip it.

What counts as an HMO

A property is an HMO if at least 3 tenants live there, forming more than 1 household, and they share a toilet, bathroom or kitchen. A household means a single person, or people who are married, in a relationship, or related to each other. Two friends sharing a 2-bed flat are not an HMO at all - you need at least 3 tenants forming more than 1 household before the rules even apply.

A large HMO is one where at least 5 tenants live there, again forming more than 1 household and sharing facilities. This is the threshold that triggers mandatory, nationwide licensing.

Three types of licensing - and why the label matters

Because additional and selective schemes vary street by street and change over time, "I'm under 5 tenants" is not the same as "I'm licence-free". Always check your own postcode on your local council's website before assuming you're exempt.

The national minimum standards

Since October 2018, every mandatory HMO licence carries fixed national conditions that no council can lower. The best known are the minimum floor areas for rooms used as sleeping accommodation.

OccupantMinimum floor areaNote
One person aged 10 or over6.51 sqmThe most common single-room minimum
Two persons aged 10 or over10.22 sqmApplies to shared double rooms
One child under 104.64 sqmSmallest permitted sleeping room
Any room under 4.64 sqmNot permittedCannot be used as sleeping accommodation at all

Ceiling height matters too - any part of a room with a ceiling lower than 1.5 metres does not count towards the floor area, which catches out attic and loft conversions in particular. On top of room sizes, the licence holder and the manager of the property must pass a "fit and proper person" test (no relevant criminal record or history of breaching landlord law), and a licence normally runs for up to 5 years.

A licence is granted to the person, not the property. If you sell, the new owner must apply for their own licence from scratch - there is no automatic transfer, and no refund of the unused portion of your fee.

How to apply

  1. Apply to your local council, not to a national body - the fee is set locally and varies significantly between areas.
  2. A managing agent can apply on your behalf if you use one.
  3. Expect to provide floor plans, a current gas safety certificate, an electrical safety report (EICR), and details of fire precautions such as smoke alarms and fire doors.
  4. The council will assess the property against the national conditions plus any local ones, and check the fit and proper person test before issuing the licence.

What happens if you don't get one

Operating an HMO that should be licensed, without a licence, is a criminal offence. Councils can prosecute for an unlimited fine, or issue a civil penalty instead - and since the Renters' Rights Act took effect on 1 May 2026, that civil penalty cap rose from £30,000 to £40,000.

Separately, tenants (or the council) can apply to the First-tier Tribunal for a rent repayment order to claw back rent already paid. For offences committed on or after 1 May 2026, tenants can now recover up to 24 months' rent, up from 12 months previously, and the window to bring the claim has also been extended from 12 to 24 months after the offence. An unlicensed HMO also weakens your position generally - it is hard to look like a compliant landlord in front of a court if you are relying on a Section 8 ground for possession while the property itself is unlicensed.

Get your paperwork right, HMO or not

Licensing covers the property. You still need a compliant assured periodic tenancy agreement for every room or unit you let. Our Agreement Pack builds one from your answers in minutes - delivered instantly as PDF and Word, £29 one-off.

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need an HMO licence for a 2-bed flat shared by two friends? No. You need at least 3 tenants forming more than 1 household before a property counts as an HMO at all, so a 2-person flat share is outside the rules entirely.

My property only has 4 tenants - am I safe? Not automatically. Mandatory licensing only catches 5 or more tenants nationwide, but many councils run additional licensing that pulls in 3 to 4 tenant HMOs. Check your council's page for your exact postcode.

How long does an HMO licence last? Normally up to 5 years, and it does not transfer if you sell - the new owner has to apply for their own licence.

What if I buy a property that's already an unlicensed HMO? You become responsible for it from the day you take over. Apply before you let it or continue letting it - a prompt, properly made application can also provide a defence if the position is later queried.

This guide is general information for landlords in England, not legal advice for your specific circumstances. Licensing rules vary by council - check your local authority's page before letting or continuing to let an HMO.

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