LATEST: Home Office issues discrimination rules on how to do Right to Rent checks
Agents and landlords are issued lengthy consultation document on how not to discriminate against tenants during checks.

Landlords and letting agents have been given updated advice for doing Right to Rent checks to ensure they don’t discriminate against prospective tenants.
The Home Office’s new consultation code of practice applies to residential tenancy agreements starting on 6th April as well as where a repeat check on an existing tenant needs to be carried out after this time, to retain a statutory excuse.
It outlines how agents and landlords should not make assumptions about a person’s right to rent, or their immigration status on the basis of their colour, nationality, ethnic or national origins, accent or length of time they have been resident in the UK.
They must not simply check the status of those who they think appear or are likely to be migrants, treat those with a time-limited right to rent more or less favourably, treat those who have access to the Home Office online checking service or who provide a manual document listed as an acceptable document more or less favourably.
Discriminiation
As well as direct discrimination, the code highlights indirect discrimination, which could include insisting that a prospective tenant has been resident in the UK for more than five years, which would mean migrants are less likely to be able to meet the requirement.
Landlords and letting agents must also not discriminate against someone based upon the type of right to rent check which is required. For instance, a British or Irish citizen can decide that they do not want to use an IDSP for digital identity document verification and use a physical document instead.
For those prospective tenants who cannot evidence their right to rent, the code adds that landlords should try to keep the offer of accommodation open to give them the opportunity to produce documents to demonstrate this.
Read the new consultation text in full.
Read more about Right to Rent rules.









