Benefits & Children Discrimination Checker
Check whether a landlord, letting agent, referencing company or person acting for a landlord may have treated you unfairly because you receive benefits or have children.
Use this checker for: “No DSS”, “No benefits”, “No Universal Credit”, “professionals only”, “working tenants only”, “no children”, “no families”, “adults only”, refused viewings, rejected applications, ignored benefit income, mortgage excuses, insurance excuses and tenancy clauses that restrict children or benefits.
Recent legal changes used by this checker
Signs this checker looks for
- Benefits wording: “No DSS”, “No benefits”, “No Universal Credit”, “No Housing Benefit”, “No PIP”, “professionals only”, “working tenants only”, refused viewings, rejected applications or a referencing process that ignores benefit income.
- Children wording: “No children”, “No families”, “adults only”, “no under 18s”, children cannot visit, children cannot live there, foster or adopted children not accepted, or age-specific child bans without a clear and proportionate reason.
- Affordability problems: affordability checks are not automatically unlawful, but the result becomes risky if benefit income is ignored, discounted or treated worse than wages, pension income or other reliable income.
- Mortgage and superior lease excuses: these are commonly mentioned, but after the 2026 changes they are usually weak reasons where the new benefits and children rules apply.
- Insurance excuses: these need dates. An old restrictive policy may need specialist checking if it started before the relevant rule date and has not renewed or ended.
- Possible children exceptions: the result checks overcrowding, licensing conditions, shared facilities, student/supported accommodation, safeguarding, retirement schemes and proportionate legitimate aims.
This tool flags issues. A council, court, tribunal, police officer, adviser or solicitor will look at the full evidence and legal route.
What to do after your result
Save dated evidence
Take screenshots before adverts change. Keep the listing URL, agent name, message chain, rejection email, application records, affordability report and any clause mentioning children, benefits, mortgage, insurance or licensing.
Ask for the reason in writing
If it is safe, ask whether the decision was because of benefits, children, affordability, insurance, mortgage, licensing, overcrowding or another stated reason. A written reply often becomes the clearest evidence.
Use the correct country route
England usually points to the local council for the property area. Scotland can involve Police Scotland because guidance describes rental discrimination as a criminal offence. Wales and Northern Ireland need nation-specific advice routes.
Do not ignore urgent threats
If there are lock-change threats, utility cut-offs, harassment, homelessness risk, court papers or pressure to leave, get urgent advice. Keep looking for housing while any complaint is being handled.
Official and advice sources
- GOV.UK — Renters’ Rights Act overview for tenants
- GOV.UK — Rental discrimination under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025
- GOV.UK — Rental discrimination guide for tenants: if you have children
- GOV.UK — Rental discrimination guide for tenants: if you get benefits
- GOV.WALES — Renting Homes 2026 amendments guidance
- Scottish Government — Rental discrimination guidance for Scotland
- Citizens Advice — Landlord will not rent because of benefits or children
- Shelter England — No benefits and no children discrimination when renting
- nidirect — Landlord and tenant obligations in Northern Ireland
FAQs
Can a landlord say “No DSS” or “No benefits”?
In England, from 1 May 2026, a landlord or person acting for them should not discourage or stop a relevant private renter from renting because they receive benefits. Scotland introduced private rented sector rules from 1 May 2026. Wales starts related occupation contract provisions from 1 June 2026. A “No DSS” advert, message or application rule is a strong warning sign and should be saved as evidence.
Can a landlord refuse me because I get Universal Credit?
A blanket refusal because someone receives Universal Credit, Housing Benefit, PIP, ESA, JSA, Income Support, Pension Credit, Tax Credits, Child Benefit, Carer’s Allowance or another welfare payment is a strong warning sign. A landlord can normally check affordability, but the source of income should not be used as a blanket reason to refuse.
Can a letting agent ignore benefit income in affordability checks?
Ignoring or discounting benefit income is risky. If affordability is assessed, ask the agent to confirm in writing that all reliable income was counted. If they use a higher income threshold because the applicant receives benefits or has children, save the calculation and ask for the policy.
Can a landlord say “professionals only”?
“Professionals only”, “working tenants only” or “full-time employed only” can be coded wording where it is used to exclude benefit claimants. The wording is especially important if the agent refuses to arrange a viewing or refuses to assess affordability after benefits are mentioned.
Can a landlord say “No children” or “No families”?
A blanket no-children or no-families rule is a strong warning sign. In England and Wales, the relevant guidance covers children under 18 living at or visiting the property. Scotland guidance also covers unfair treatment because a child lives with or visits a tenant.
Can children be stopped from visiting?
Children visiting can be covered, not only children permanently living at the property. A landlord should not use a blanket rule that children cannot visit unless there is a specific lawful reason, such as a genuine and evidenced safeguarding, licensing or safety issue.
What if the property is too small or would be overcrowded?
Overcrowding and licensing can sometimes be relevant. The landlord should give a specific reason, not just a vague phrase like “not suitable for children”. Ask for the overcrowding calculation, licensing condition, HMO condition or other evidence relied on.
Can a landlord use a mortgage clause as the reason?
Mortgage or superior lease restrictions are generally weak reasons after the 2026 changes where the relevant rules apply. If the landlord or agent relies on a mortgage clause, ask for the exact written reason and keep the reply for the council, police or adviser route.
Can a landlord use insurance as the reason?
Insurance is more complicated. The tool asks whether the policy started before 1 May 2026 and whether it renewed or ended. If the policy started or renewed after the rule date, the excuse is usually weaker. Ask for the exact policy wording, start date and renewal date.
Where should I report the issue?
For England, the usual route is the local council for the area where the property is located. Scotland guidance says rental discrimination is a criminal offence, so Police Scotland or a specialist adviser may be relevant. Wales needs Wales-specific advice, especially around the 1 June 2026 commencement date. Northern Ireland has separate rules, so contact Housing Rights NI, Equality Commission NI or a solicitor.
What evidence should I keep?
Keep advert screenshots, listing URLs, emails, texts, WhatsApp messages, voicemail notes, call logs, rejection messages, affordability calculations, tenancy clauses, occupation contract terms, insurance or mortgage messages, and any written explanation from the landlord, agent or referencing company. Write down phone-call notes immediately with the date, time and exact words used.
Is this checker legal advice?
No. It is a guided issue-spotting tool. It helps organise facts, evidence and next steps, but it does not make a legal decision. Urgent eviction, homelessness, harassment, criminal offence, Equality Act, court or tribunal issues should be checked with a qualified adviser.