Reforms to student housing risk undermining access to higher education and making it harder for students to secure suitable accommodation.
That is the warning from the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), Accommodation for Students, UniHomes, and the Young Group, which say the first phase of the Renters’ Rights Act could trigger a sharp contraction in the student rental market.
The NRLA, along with its other signatories, warn that under this new timetable, student landlords will be unable to guarantee available homes for the next cohort of student tenants, which not only disrupts the student housing cycle, but also means that landlords cannot guarantee that their properties will be empty in time for their start date.
With the Renters’ Rights Act’s implementation date now confirmed, HMO student landlords who use the student possession ground (Ground 4A) shortly after 1 May (the start of the implementation period) will not be able to take back possession of their property until the first week of September, due to the 4-month notice period required under Ground 4A.
This implementation plan leaves a gap in which landlords cannot gain possession of their properties in time for August 2026, which is too late for incoming students, whose tenancies are set to start on 1 September.
Ben Beadle, chief executive of the NRLA, believes this will undoubtedly worsen the existing crisis in student accommodation, with access to housing already a key concern for students. According to research by Knight Frank, 65% of university applicants say accommodation availability influences where they choose to study.
Beadle said: “The government has put opportunity and aspiration at risk with this decision. The failure to protect the annual cycle of all student housing will shut people out of higher education and make it harder for others to plan where they will live.
“Limiting access to accommodation doesn’t just affect students. It will be of particular concern to many universities already facing difficult financial futures.”

It is already happening. Sensible landlords with properties of a good or high standard pivoted to professionals last summer.
2026 will be the last year where students will see a decent stock of student housing as in 2027 the tenancies will end in May or June and no student (parent) will want to rent from those dates. That’ll be the last time those landlords target students only.
The upside is that the professional sharer market will benefit from an infllux of property. The downside of that of course will be downward pressure on sharer rents for a while.
My guess is that due to the cost of living crisis we’ll see more students choosing courses within communatable distance from home also. Then just fewer students, unless we see a tax on wealth (assets) not work.
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So the Boy Beadle was not rewarded for rolling over on the abolition of Section 21.
How disappointing for him.
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Student need to think hard before getting 50k debt
With the coming of AI there is no point doing humanities
If not science or medicine kids need to learn a trade
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