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Looking for a solicitor to get you the right result with your section 21 matter? We can help you.
When you need to regain possession of your property, timing and accuracy are crucial. We guide landlords through the Section 21 process with expertise and efficiency, ensuring all legal requirements are met while minimising delays and complications.
FAQs
A Section 21 notice is commonly referred to as a ‘no-fault eviction’ as the landlord will not need to provide a reason for eviction. However, a landlord can only serve this form of eviction notice once the tenant’s fixed-term tenancy has ended or on occasions where the tenancy is open-ended.
The duration of the fixed term is set out in the tenancy agreement. In the UK, the length of a fixed-term is usually between six months to one year.
A Section 21 notice becomes invalid if the landlord hasn’t correctly completed several requirements, which include:
For more questions on what makes a section 21 notice valid, please contact our solicitors on 020 3007 5500.
As highlighted above, one of the factors that can make a section 21 notice invalid is the way the notice has been served. Therefore, if you’re serving a section 21 notice it’s important to know how to correctly serve the notice.
When you want to serve notice a form 6a will need to be properly completed and then served to the tenant in one of the following ways.
When you serve the section 21 notice, proof of delivery is of the utmost importance. If your tenant contests the eviction, it’s highly highly likely that this proof of delivery will be demanded in court.
The notice date in the section 21 notice isn’t when tenancy legally ends, but more of a date to urge the tenant to move out. If the tenant hasn’t left the premises by the notice date, you will need to look to legally enforce the eviction.
The next stage to evicting a tenant will be to identify and apply for the possession claim. However, if the tenant is still not evicting the premises, you will need to apply for a warrant of possession from the courts. If this warrant of possession is approved, the court will issue the tenant with an eviction notice with a date that they must legally vacate the property by. If the tenant was to ignore this eviction date, a bailiff will go round to remove the tenants.
When it comes to the cost of evicting a tenant through a section 21 notice, it entirely depends on several factors. For instance, whether the tenant vacates the property by the notice date or contests the eviction.
Evicting your tenant may be as straight forward as getting a solicitor to serve notice and then the tenants move out but the notice date.
Generally, our solicitors advise that the costs associated with a section 21 are:
Service | Price | Disbursements | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Draft and serve a section 21 | £450 plus VAT | N/A | Only if the landlord has all the relevant documentation in place. |
Issue accelerated possession claim | £800 plus VAT | £404 (court fee) | On the basis that a defence is not received or if the defence isn’t listed for hearing. |
Apply for a warrant of possession | £350 plus VAT | £148 (court fee) | N/A |
Serve and enforce section 21 | £1,600 plus VAT | £552 | This does not include preparing for a defence hearing. |
Recoverable costs
These are capped at £69.50 for legal fees and the court issue fee of £355.
Few eviction solicitors offer legal aid and while we would love to, the government only appoints a tiny number of law firms to offer these services. So for the time being, we can only accept privately funded cases.
Call, email or provide us with a few details of your matter, and we’ll help you arrange an initial consultation. You’ll get:
No fee surprises. Ever. Our solicitors in London and Brighton will inform you from the outset how much your case will cost and we will do everything in our power to keep costs down and within your original fee estimate.
You are our priority and law is our speciality. Our award-winning solicitors in London and Brighton ensure you know exactly where you stand from a legal perspective so you can make a well-informed decision.
With fortnightly updates on your case, you’ll never be left in the dark. Our solicitors in London and Brighton ensure you know exactly how your case is progressing and are with you every step of the way.
What we do
Our untimed initial consultations provide you with as long as you need to speak to a specialist solicitor about your matter.