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Student Letting Agencies UK 2026: Complete Guide | Unifresher
Student Accommodation Guide

Student Letting Agencies UK: The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know before renting through a student letting agent. HMOs, guarantors, joint tenancies, referencing, bills, deposits, your legal rights and how to spot a reliable agency before you sign.

15 min read Last updated May 2026 Accommodation
£0
Admin, referencing and application fees agents can charge in England
5 weeks
Typical maximum deposit where annual rent is under £50,000
30 days
Deadline to protect your deposit and give prescribed information
1 May 2026
Main Renters' Rights Act tenancy changes began in England
Definition

What does a student letting agent do?

A letting agent manages rental properties for landlords. They usually handle viewings, applications, references, tenancy paperwork, deposits, rent collection and maintenance reporting.

Fees

Can letting agents charge students fees?

In England, no. They cannot charge admin, application, referencing, inventory or viewing fees. Permitted payments include rent, a capped tenancy deposit and a capped holding deposit.

Timing

When should I start looking?

October to January is the main search window for September move-ins in competitive student cities. Good houses still appear later, but popular areas can go early.

Trust

How do I know an agent is legitimate?

Check their redress scheme, client money protection and recent reviews. ARLA Propertymark or NALS membership is a positive sign, but always verify the basics before paying anything.

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The basics

What is a student letting agent?

A student letting agent is a rental agency that manages student houses, flats and HMOs on behalf of landlords. Instead of dealing directly with the property owner, you usually deal with the agency for viewings, applications, referencing, contracts, maintenance requests and deposit returns.

Student agencies understand the academic calendar. That is why many properties are advertised months before the next September move-in, especially in cities with major student areas such as Leeds, Nottingham, Manchester, Bristol and Edinburgh.

The agent does not work for you. They are normally instructed by the landlord. A good agent can still make renting much easier, but you should treat everything as a legal and financial decision rather than just a quick house search.

Letting agent essentials
  • Must belong to a government-approved redress scheme in England
  • Must have client money protection if they handle rent or deposits
  • Cannot charge banned tenant fees in England
  • Must protect eligible deposits in an approved scheme within 30 days
  • Should provide key safety documents before move-in
  • Should confirm repairs, bills and deposit terms in writing
New tenancy rules

Renters' Rights Act 2025: what students need to know

The Renters' Rights Act 2025 changed private renting in England. The main tenancy changes started on 1 May 2026. From that date, most existing assured shorthold tenancies automatically became assured periodic tenancies, and new assured private tenancies are rolling rather than fixed term.

What changed: tenancy agreements can no longer rely on a fixed end date for most assured private tenancies. Section 21 no-fault eviction has also been removed, which means landlords need a valid legal ground to regain possession.

What this means for students: private student house tenancies may work differently from older advice you have seen online. Your letting agent should explain whether your tenancy is assured, periodic, exempt, or covered by specific student accommodation rules. University halls and some purpose-built student accommodation can be treated differently, so check your exact agreement before assuming the rules are the same.

Ask before signing: How does the Renters' Rights Act affect this specific tenancy? If the agent cannot explain the notice rules, possession grounds and whether any student-specific exception applies, get your students union housing advice team to review the contract.
Key changes in England
  • Most assured shorthold tenancies became assured periodic tenancies on 1 May 2026
  • New assured tenancies normally run on a rolling basis
  • Section 21 no-fault evictions have been removed
  • Landlords need a legal ground to end a tenancy
  • Rent increases are limited to the statutory process
  • Students should check if their accommodation type has specific rules
Comparison

Letting agent vs private landlord vs PBSA

There is no single best route. The right option depends on whether you want price, simplicity, independence or stronger on-site support.

FactorLetting agentPrivate landlordPBSA provider
Typical setupShared house, flat or HMO managed by an agencyDirect rental from the property ownerPurpose-built student accommodation block
Bills includedSometimesSometimesUsually
MaintenanceLogged through agency, speed variesDirect to landlord, very variableUsually on-site or central support team
GuarantorUsually requiredOften requiredDepends on provider
Best forStudents who want a house with friendsStudents who want direct contact and flexibilityStudents who want bills included and simpler admin
HMOs

HMOs explained: what every student renter needs to know

Most shared student houses are HMOs, which means Houses in Multiple Occupation. In England, a property is generally an HMO if at least three tenants live there, form more than one household, and share facilities such as a kitchen, bathroom or toilet.

A large HMO normally needs a licence if at least five tenants live there, form more than one household and share facilities. Councils can also run additional licensing schemes for smaller HMOs, so a three or four person student house may still need a licence in some areas.

Basic HMO

3 or more tenants

Three or more unrelated tenants sharing facilities can make a property an HMO.

Mandatory licence

5 or more tenants

Large HMOs usually require a council licence. Ask for the licence number before signing.

Local rules

Additional licensing

Some councils license smaller HMOs too. Always check the local council website.

Safety

Higher standards

HMOs should meet stricter safety, room size, fire and waste management requirements.

HMO checks before signing
  • Ask if the property needs a licence
  • Verify the licence with the local council
  • Check smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms
  • Ask for the gas safety certificate
  • Ask when the electrics were last inspected
  • Check room sizes, damp, locks and escape routes
Guarantors

Guarantors: everything students need to know

Most letting agents ask students for a guarantor because students often do not have a full-time income or rental history. A guarantor is someone who agrees to cover rent or certain costs if you do not pay.

Most agents prefer a UK-based guarantor who is over 18, employed or financially stable, and able to pass a credit check. Some ask that the guarantor earns a set multiple of the rent or owns a home.

Read the guarantor agreement carefully. On a joint tenancy, some guarantor agreements can create wider liability than students expect. Ideally, your guarantor should only be liable for your share, but this depends on the wording.

No UK guarantor? Ask about university guarantor schemes, third-party services such as Housing Hand or UK Guarantor, paying more rent upfront, or choosing PBSA providers with more flexible guarantor rules.
Referencing

The tenant referencing process

Referencing is the check letting agents use before agreeing to rent to you. Students usually pass by combining proof of student status with a guarantor.

1
Identity check
You will need a passport, driving licence or other accepted ID. International students may also need visa or right to rent documents.
2
Student status check
The agent may ask for your university offer, enrolment confirmation or student finance evidence.
3
Credit check
A thin credit file is normal for students. Serious defaults, CCJs or insolvency records are more likely to cause problems.
4
Guarantor check
Your guarantor may need ID, proof of address, payslips, accounts or evidence of income.
5
Holding deposit
A holding deposit in England is capped at one week's rent. Get the refund rules in writing before paying.
Joint tenancies

Joint tenancies: the most important thing to understand

Most student houses are rented on a joint tenancy. That means all housemates sign one agreement and share responsibility for the full rent and property obligations.

The key phrase is joint and several liability. If one person stops paying, the landlord or agent may be able to pursue the rest of the group for the missing rent. This is why choosing housemates is not just a social decision. It is a financial one.

FeatureJoint tenancyIndividual tenancy
Who signsAll tenants on one contractEach tenant signs separately
Rent liabilityGroup liability for the full rentEach person liable for their room
If someone leavesThe group may need to cover or replace themUsually only that tenancy is affected
Common inStudent houses and HMOsPBSA and some room-by-room lets
Before you sign: Discuss rent affordability, what happens if someone drops out, how bills will be split and whether everyone understands the guarantor risk.
Bills and utilities

Bills in student lets: everything to set up

Private lets through letting agents often exclude bills. Always budget beyond the rent figure in the listing.

Energy

  • Gas and electricity
  • Take meter readings on day one
  • Budget higher in winter

Water

  • Register with the local supplier
  • Check if the property is metered
  • Split fairly between housemates

Broadband

  • Book before move-in if possible
  • Check speeds at the address
  • Aim for at least 100Mbps for a shared house

Other costs

  • Contents insurance
  • TV licence if needed
  • Council tax exemption for full-time students

Bills included? Get the details in writing. Ask which bills are included, whether there is a usage cap, and what happens if the household goes over it.

Choosing an agent

How to choose a student letting agent

Start with legitimacy checks. Ask which redress scheme they belong to, whether they have client money protection, which deposit scheme they use and whether the property needs an HMO licence.

Then check recent reviews. Do not just look at the star rating. Read comments from the last 12 months about maintenance speed, communication, deposit returns and how disputes were handled.

At viewings, ask specific questions. A professional agent should answer clearly and follow up in writing. A vague answer about deposits, safety certificates or repairs is a warning sign.

Questions to ask every agent
  • Which redress scheme are you registered with?
  • Which deposit scheme will protect my deposit?
  • Is the property an HMO and does it need a licence?
  • Can I see the gas safety certificate and EPC?
  • Who handles emergency repairs?
  • Are any bills included and is there a usage cap?
  • Can I review the contract before signing?
Due diligence

Red flags and green flags

Green flags

  • Clear redress scheme and client money protection
  • Recent positive reviews from students
  • Deposit scheme confirmed in writing
  • Safety certificates available before move-in
  • Happy for you to review the contract
  • Written maintenance process and emergency contact

Red flags

  • Pressure to sign immediately
  • Requests for banned fees
  • Cannot confirm deposit protection
  • Refuses viewing before payment
  • Only contactable through WhatsApp
  • No written answers to key questions
Rental scam warning: Never transfer money for a property you have not viewed or verified. Be especially careful with unusually cheap listings, overseas landlords, pressure to pay immediately or requests to avoid official agency systems.
Step by step

The student renting process through a letting agent

October to November

Start browsing areas, prices and agencies. Talk honestly with potential housemates before booking viewings.

November to January

View properties, compare at least three options and check agent reviews before paying anything.

January to March

Choose a property, review the tenancy and guarantor agreement, then complete referencing.

Before move-in

Confirm deposit protection, safety documents, bill arrangements and any promised repairs in writing.

Move-in day

Photograph every room before unpacking and email the photos to the agent the same day.

Your deposit

Deposit protection: how it works

In England, a tenancy deposit is capped at up to five weeks' rent if annual rent is below £50,000, or up to six weeks' rent if annual rent is £50,000 to £100,000. Most student properties fall under the five-week cap, but the exact rule matters in expensive areas.

Your landlord or agent must protect your deposit in an approved tenancy deposit scheme and give you prescribed information within 30 days. This should explain where the deposit is held, how to get it back, and how disputes are handled.

Deposit checklist
  • Check the deposit amount before paying
  • Confirm which scheme will protect it
  • Get prescribed information within 30 days
  • Photograph the property on move-in day
  • Keep all emails and repair reports
  • Use the scheme's dispute process if deductions are unfair
End of tenancy

Moving out and getting your deposit back

Most deposit disputes come down to evidence. Your move-in photos, inventory and written emails matter more than memory.

Legitimate deductions

  • Damage beyond fair wear and tear
  • Missing items from the inventory
  • Unpaid rent or agreed charges
  • Lost keys or access fobs
  • Cleaning where the property is left worse than at check-in

Challenge these

  • Normal scuffs from everyday use
  • Charges for damage already on the inventory
  • Vague cleaning fees without evidence
  • Replacing old items with new at your expense
  • Claims not supported by photos or invoices
Best protection: Take date-stamped photos before unpacking and again after cleaning when you move out. Email both sets to the agent.
Legal protections

Your rights as a student tenant

1
No banned fees
In England, agents cannot charge admin, referencing, viewing, application or inventory fees. Similar protections apply in Scotland and Wales under their own rules.
2
Safe and habitable home
The property should be safe, with working heating, hot water, electrical safety checks and gas safety where relevant.
3
Quiet enjoyment
Landlords and agents should usually give at least 24 hours notice before visiting, except in genuine emergencies.
4
Deposit protection
Eligible deposits must be protected and disputes can be handled through the deposit scheme without a solicitor.
5
Free advice
Your students union housing advice service, Shelter and Citizens Advice can help if you are unsure, pressured or in dispute.

Not sure private renting is right for you?

Compare university halls, PBSA and private renting side by side in our full accommodation comparison guide.

Compare all accommodation types
Frequently asked questions

Student letting agencies: FAQs

When should I start looking for a student let?
October to January is the main search window in competitive cities for a September move-in. You can still find properties later, but the best-located shared houses often go earlier.
Can letting agents charge students admin fees?
In England, no. The Tenant Fees Act bans charges such as admin, referencing, application, inventory and viewing fees. Permitted payments include rent, a capped tenancy deposit and a capped holding deposit.
Do I need a guarantor?
Usually yes. Most agents ask students for a guarantor because they do not have full-time income. If you do not have a UK guarantor, ask about university schemes, third-party guarantor services or upfront rent options.
What is an HMO?
An HMO is a property occupied by at least three tenants from more than one household who share facilities. Large HMOs with five or more tenants usually need a council licence, and some councils license smaller HMOs too.
What changed under the Renters' Rights Act?
The main tenancy changes began on 1 May 2026 in England. Most assured private tenancies are now periodic rather than fixed term, and Section 21 no-fault eviction has been removed. Student accommodation can have specific rules, so check your contract.
What if my agent ignores repairs?
Report repairs in writing and keep evidence. If a serious issue is ignored, escalate to the agency manager, the landlord, your students union advice team and your local council's environmental health team where appropriate.
Can my agent keep my deposit for cleaning?
Only if the property is left worse than it was at check-in and the deduction is evidenced. They cannot charge for fair wear and tear. Use the deposit scheme's dispute process if you disagree.
Should I use a letting agent or rent directly from a landlord?
Both can work. Letting agents offer a more formal process and complaints route, while direct landlords can be more flexible. The quality of the individual agent or landlord matters more than the route itself.

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