Official law and government guidance
Use for legal rules, commencement, tenancy reform, official duties, forms, prescribed information and official user guidance.
Sources
Renters Rights Toolkit is built around source-led private renting information for England. This page lists the official, specialist and editorial references we use when creating and reviewing guides, checkers, templates, evidence tools and policy pages.
Renting content can affect someone’s home, money, safety and legal position. A source page helps users understand where the website’s guidance comes from, how claims are checked and how to report a problem.
This page supports transparency by separating official sources, specialist housing advice, tribunal and complaint routes, deposit and safety sources, editorial quality sources and sources we treat with caution.
It also helps users move beyond a general toolkit page when they need to verify wording against the original source.
Sources are used to check legal routes, explain practical steps, verify forms and deadlines, support tables, build checklists, write FAQs, prepare template warnings and decide when users should get qualified advice.
Not every guide uses every source on this page. Each topic should use the sources most relevant to that issue, such as deposit scheme guidance for deposits, council enforcement sources for hazards, or tribunal guidance for rent challenges.
When sources conflict or appear outdated, we aim to prefer the more official, current and directly relevant source.
This hierarchy helps decide which source should carry more weight when writing or updating a guide.
Use for legal rules, commencement, tenancy reform, official duties, forms, prescribed information and official user guidance.
Use for possession process, rent challenges, tribunal steps, complaints, enforcement powers and official procedure information.
Use for practical explanations, tenant routes, adviser-style warnings, evidence prompts and common problem areas.
Use for deposit protection, ombudsman routes, agent redress, safety records, licensing and compliance processes.
Use for helpful content, accessibility, user needs, corrections, transparency and source-led publishing standards.
Use only for context or user questions unless the underlying official source has been checked. Do not rely on them alone for legal rules.
These are the main official sources used for private renting guidance, rules and official route checking in England.
These sources are important for content involving eviction, possession claims, rent challenges, tribunal steps and formal dispute routes.
Specialist advice sources are used for practical explanation, common user questions, evidence prompts and routes where official guidance may be brief.
These sources support pages about deposit protection, deposit disputes, rent increases, repairs, hazards and safety records.
These sources support content about complaints, council enforcement, letting agents, redress schemes, ombudsman routes and escalation.
These sources support pages about benefits, children, disability, assistance animals, pet requests, advertising, rental bidding and fair treatment.
These sources support pages for landlords and agents about recordkeeping, adverts, safety, compliance, notices, complaints and fair letting duties.
These sources support how the website is structured, reviewed and corrected. They do not decide housing law, but they help improve user trust, clarity, accessibility and plain-language content.
Some sources are useful for spotting user confusion or emerging topics, but they are not enough on their own for legal or procedural statements.
Sources may be updated, replaced or removed when official guidance changes, a page is no longer available, a link breaks, a source no longer supports the statement, or a user reports a credible correction.
High-risk updates are prioritised first, especially where the issue may affect eviction, homelessness, illegal eviction, serious hazards, court deadlines, rent, deposits, discrimination or money.
Each major guide or tool should use sources according to the topic. A deposit article should not rely only on a general renting page. A possession article should not rely only on a news summary. A complaint article should identify whether the correct route is a landlord, agent redress scheme, council, ombudsman, deposit scheme, tribunal or court.
| Eviction and notices | Use official possession, notice, court and tribunal sources first, supported by Shelter, Shelter Legal or Citizens Advice for practical explanation. |
|---|---|
| Rent increases | Use official rent dispute and tribunal sources first, then add market evidence, affordability and letter-writing support. |
| Repairs and hazards | Use official repair, safety and HHSRS sources, then add council route guidance and specialist advice for practical steps. |
| Deposits | Use GOV.UK deposit guidance and the three authorised scheme sources for protection checks, disputes and evidence. |
| Pets and discrimination | Use official Renters’ Rights Act guidance, equality law and specialist advice sources where the issue overlaps with disability, children or benefits. |
| Landlord and agent compliance | Use official landlord, letting, safety, right to rent, redress, licensing and reform guidance before using sector commentary. |
| Trust and policy pages | Use GOV.UK content design, accessibility standards and the site’s own editorial, corrections and disclaimer pages. |
These pages explain how sources are used, reviewed, limited and corrected across the website.
How we research, write, review and update renting content.
Read editorial policyHow source-led review and specialist review notes should be understood.
Read expert review policyHow users can report broken links, outdated guidance and unsupported wording.
Read corrections policyWhy the website provides general information only and does not give legal advice.
Read legal disclaimerSend the page URL, the source problem, the wording affected and the best official or specialist replacement source you have. We prioritise high-risk housing content first.
Quick answers about how Renters Rights Toolkit chooses, uses and updates sources.
A separate sources page helps users verify the website’s information, understand the source hierarchy and report broken or outdated references.
No. Each page should use the sources most relevant to the topic. For example, a deposit guide should use deposit sources, while an eviction guide should use possession and court sources.
Official law, official government guidance, official court or tribunal information and official scheme guidance carry the most weight for legal rules, forms, deadlines and procedures.
Specialist advice sources can explain practical steps, common problems and evidence routes in a user-friendly way. They support practical understanding but do not override official law or procedure.
No. Sources support general information. They do not create legal advice, legal representation or a decision about a user’s own documents or case.
Yes. Use the corrections page or contact email. Include the page URL, the current source, the replacement source and why it is more accurate or current.
News sources may help identify current public discussion, but legal or procedural statements should be checked against official or specialist sources before publication.
The affected page should be reviewed. The source may be updated, replaced, clarified or removed depending on whether it still supports the content.