Common reasons a Section 21 notice may be invalid
Direct answer
This supporting page lists common invalidity reasons only. For the primary condition-by-condition hub, use the Section 21 validity guides.
Step one: when was the notice served?
The Renters' Rights Act 2025 abolished new Section 21 notices in the private rented sector in England from 1 May 2026. A notice served on or after that date has no legal force regardless of its contents. A notice served before 1 May 2026 may still be enforceable, but only if it meets all the validity requirements and the landlord applies to court by 31 July 2026, the transitional court-issue deadline.
Invalid reasons checklist for legacy notices
For a Section 21 notice served before 1 May 2026, the usual invalidity reasons cover form and timing. Form 6A is the prescribed form under the Assured Shorthold Tenancy Notices and Prescribed Requirements (England) Regulations 2015.
- Prescribed form: Form 6A; a different document needs checking on its information and the other legacy requirements.
- Two calendar months' notice: fewer than two full months from service is a fatal defect.
- Four-month rule: no Section 21 during the first four months, measured from the start of the first fixed term.
- Six-month validity window: the notice lapses six months after service unless court proceedings are issued in time.
Deposit protection
Under section 213 of the Housing Act 2004, the deposit must be protected in an authorised scheme (DPS, MyDeposits, or TDS) within 30 days of the landlord receiving it. Even one day late creates a bar on Section 21 under section 215. The landlord must also serve the prescribed information within 30 days; protecting the deposit without serving it is still a defect.
Prescribed documents
Three prescribed documents must have reached the tenant. A valid EPC must have been provided before the tenancy began. A current gas safety record must have been provided - before move-in for new tenants and within 28 days of each annual check for existing tenants. The current How to Rent guide must also have been given, including the latest edition before the notice if a new one has since been published.
Property licensing
Licensing gaps can bar Section 21. A property occupied by five or more people from two or more households is an HMO needing a mandatory licence, and a Section 21 cannot be served on an unlicensed mandatory HMO under section 75 of the Housing Act 2004. Some councils also run additional or selective licensing for smaller properties, and a missing required licence may bar Section 21.
Other bars: fees and retaliatory eviction
Under the Tenant Fees Act 2019, an unrepaid prohibited payment bars Section 21 until the money is returned. Under section 33 of the Deregulation Act 2015, a Section 21 notice is invalid if served within 6 months of the council issuing an improvement notice or taking emergency remedial action after a complaint about the property's condition.
Related guidance inside this topic
- If your next step turns on legacy Section 21 notice rules, read Section 21 notice validity outcome guides.
- For the dates, forms, and evidence behind legacy Section 21 notice rules, see Section 21 notice checker before you respond.
- If this issue overlaps with legacy Section 21 notice rules, check overview of tenant rights in England to compare the legal tests.
- For a fuller breakdown of legacy Section 21 notice rules, use Section 21 transition rules for the underlying rule set.
- If you need the route-specific rules on legacy Section 21 notice rules, start with what replaces Section 21 so you can check the dates and documents against your own case.
Sources used for this guide
These are primary legislation and public guidance sources that support the legal-information framework used on this page.
- Housing Act 1988
Primary statute for assured tenancies, Section 8 possession notices, Schedule 2 grounds, and legacy Section 21 rules. - Housing Act 2004
Primary statute for tenancy deposit protection, HMO licensing, and local authority housing hazard enforcement. - Deregulation Act 2015
Primary statute for several legacy Section 21 restrictions, including prescribed requirements and retaliatory eviction protections. - GOV.UK: private renting evictions
Government guidance on eviction notices, court orders, bailiffs, and tenant rights in private renting.
Related articles
- Renter questions answered
Plain-English answers to the most-asked questions from private renters in England: eviction, deposits, rent increases, repairs, illegal eviction, and pets. - Old rules vs new rules after May 2026
The side-by-side transition guide for Section 21, Section 8, rent increases, and periodic tenancies after 1 May 2026. - Renters' Rights Act 2026: complete guide
The main reform guide covering Section 21 abolition, Section 8, rent increases, pets, and private rented sector enforcement changes. - What happens if you do not leave after Section 21?
Plain-English guide to what a Section 21 notice means, what happens after expiry, court, bailiffs, and when to act. - Tenant checklist England 2026
A stage-by-stage checklist for issues before move-in, during the tenancy, and at move-out.
Common questions
- What makes a Section 21 notice invalid?
- A Section 21 notice is invalid if it was served on or after 1 May 2026, or if a legacy pre-May 2026 notice fails one of the legal requirements. Common defects include the wrong form, too little notice, service in the first four months, an expired notice, deposit protection or prescribed information failures, missing EPC, gas safety or How to Rent documents, required licensing gaps, prohibited payments, or retaliatory eviction under section 33 of the Deregulation Act 2015.
- Can a landlord fix a defective Section 21 notice?
- Sometimes. For a legacy notice served before 1 May 2026, some defects could be fixed by remedying the problem and serving a new notice, for example returning a deposit or providing missing prescribed documents before re-serving. But new Section 21 notices cannot be served on or after 1 May 2026, so after that date the landlord must usually use Section 8 and prove a legal ground instead.
- Do I have to leave on an invalid Section 21 notice?
- No. An invalid Section 21 notice is not an eviction and cannot support a possession order. Even where a notice is valid, you do not have to leave until the landlord obtains a county court possession order and, if needed, a county court bailiff enforces it.
- What should I do if my Section 21 notice is invalid?
- Keep the notice and all tenancy documents, run the Section 21 checker to identify the exact defects, and do not hand back the keys just because the notice asks you to leave. If court papers arrive, file a defence by the deadline and get housing advice from Shelter, Citizens Advice, or a housing solicitor.
Use the interactive checker on getrentersrights.com for the full step-by-step result.