Revealed: In two years just three penalty notices issued to agents breaking the law

Two years after it became law for letting agents to display their fees, Freedom of Information requests have found that 93% of councils have failed to issue a single financial penalty for non-compliance.

The FoI requests were put by the National Approved Letting Scheme, which is now asking how local Trading Standards teams will enforce the ban on letting agent fees charged to tenants when it comes in.

These asked local authorities a number of questions on the Consumer Rights Act legislation on the display of fees and how it was being enforced. The display of fees has been mandatory since May 27, 2015.

Of the 42 councils which responded, only three had issued penalty notices – Warwickshire, Kensington & Chelsea, and Redbridge.

Of these, only one – issued by Warwick – has been paid in full.

NALS said that the lack of notices served by councils raises clear concerns that the level of penalty may not be enough to cover the cost of enforcement. Currently, the maximum penalty is £5,000.

Most (59%) of the councils admitted they do not consider the display of letting agent fees represents a high priority for the allocation of resources within Trading Standards.

Almost half of local authorities (45%) said they only undertake reactive enforcement activity.

A third of local authorities (33%) allocated no staffing resources to this work in 2016/17, while 62% anticipate no changes in the level of staffing resources in 2017/18.

The research also raises questions about how any future fee ban would be enforced, with two thirds of local authorities (64%) revealing they have not yet assessed the likely impact on enforcement.

Isobel Thomson, chief executive of NALS, said: “We’re clearly concerned by these results and the disconnect between Government’s aspirations with consumer protection legislation and the reality of delivery through enforcement.

“We recognise Trading Standards teams are under-funded and under-resourced, but if local authorities aren’t enforcing the current legislation, what will make things different when the fee ban is implemented?

“Without sufficient robust and coherent enforcement action, we will never stop the criminal element in the PRS.

“They will continue to operate knowing they won’t face any penalty, and it’s the consumer who will continue to suffer.

“We believe now is the time to start a constructive dialogue with the Chartered Trading Standards Institute and its members on how we can work together to stamp out the rogues.”

Leon Livermore, chief executive of the Chartered Trading Standards Institute, said: “We welcome the research produced by NALS and believe that it highlights the issues of the robust enforcement needed for existing regulation that can deliver for the consumer.”

The survey did, however, highlight some good practice. Brighton & Hove had undertaken a project which led to 100% compliance of all the known letting agents in the city; North Yorkshire had proactively provided written advice to 143 letting agents.

The survey was independently undertaken by the consultancy London Property Licensing on behalf of NALS in April and May and involved a sample of 49 local authorities across England.

Full list of local authorities surveyed:

Buckinghamshire, Cornwall, Cumbria, Devon & Somerset, East Sussex, Hertfordshire, Lancashire, North Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, Suffolk, Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Bolton, Manchester, Oldham, Stockport, Trafford, St Helens, Wirral, Barnsley, Rotherham, Sunderland, South Tyneside, Wolverhampton, Sandwell, Walsall, West Yorkshire Joint Services (includes Calderdale), Barnet, Brent, Croydon, Kensington & Chelsea, Richmond uponThames, Redbridge, Southwark, Bath & North East Somerset, Brighton & Hove, Durham, Herefordshire, Middlesbrough, Nottingham, Redcar & Cleveland and South Gloucestershire.

No response from:

Bexley, Birmingham, Gloucestershire, Lincolnshire, Liverpool, Torbay and Wokingham.

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5 Comments

  1. Chris Wood

    If you don’t police the laws, you encourage law-breaking. If you allow law-breaking you fail customers, the public and law-abiding businesses. There may be (and certainly are) more serious crimes out there however, as every parent and business owner knows, if you get the small things right, everything else follows.

    We are being failed by the organisations we pay to protect us and the public.

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  2. Headache

    Trading Standards are lazy, no excuses. It takes less then 3 minutes at our PC’s to know who in our area is not displaying fees. That’s it plain and simple.

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  3. FromTheHip64

    “under-funded and under-resourced”?

    It wouldn’t take one officer half a day to visit all the agents in a town. Laziness by the councils.

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  4. NSK

    I actually reported a Block Management Company owned by a National Developer, well known for providing a poor service, high service charge and when asked for an explanation for the excessive charge, the standard response is “You will have to apply to the First Tier Tribunal.” Trading Standards have failed to prosecute or force them to join a Redress Scheme despite being given all the evidence. They seem to be going out of their way to make sure this company does not have to register. Possible brown envelopes being passed under the table?

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  5. ringi

    ARLA could have chosen to police and audit all their members (as they claim to) expelling any members that did not clearly display all charges both on RightMove etc and elsewhere.    However ARLA chose not to do so.
    Letting agents only have their self to blame for the fee ban…….

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