General guidance only - not legal advice. This article provides general information for landlords in England & Wales only. It does not apply to Scotland or Northern Ireland. Laws and procedures change; always verify current government guidance and seek professional advice for your specific circumstances.
Important update - Renters' Rights Act 2025: Section 21 no-fault evictions have been abolished for all tenancies in England from 1 May 2026. All evictions now require a valid legal ground under Section 8. Wales operates under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016, which has its own separate framework. This guide reflects the law as it applies from 1 May 2026.
Managing a house in multiple occupation (HMO) is already more demanding than a standard buy-to-let. When possession becomes necessary - whether for rent arrears, anti-social behaviour, or a breach of tenancy - the process becomes more complex. HMO eviction involves the usual legal steps, plus additional licensing obligations, tenancy-structure questions, and the practical reality of managing multiple occupiers.
To put it simply: a successful HMO eviction is rarely about “going faster” - it’s about being accurate, consistent, and compliant from the start.
Helpland helps landlords across England & Wales regain control of their property with legally compliant, fixed-fee eviction and debt recovery support. We’re one of only two NRLA-recommended suppliers, with over 20 years of experience, court representation included, bailiff coordination, and a dedicated account holder - giving you clarity, confidence, and peace of mind throughout the process.
This guide sets out the special rules that apply to HMO eviction cases, the decisions to make before serving notice, and the common issues that can delay or derail a claim.
A house in multiple occupation is, in most cases, a property rented by three or more tenants who are not from the same household, sharing facilities such as a kitchen or bathroom. Common examples include student houses, room-by-room lets to working professionals, and multi-tenant shared houses.
For licensing purposes, the legal definition has two thresholds:
Why does this matter for eviction? Because HMO licensing is directly linked to your ability to recover possession lawfully. The more occupiers, the more tenancy agreements in play, and the more compliance obligations you have - and any gap in licensing or management compliance can undermine your position before a notice has even been served.
HMO licensing and the eviction process are more closely connected than many landlords realise. The absence of a required licence does not just expose you to fines - it can directly prevent you from recovering possession.
What happens if your HMO should be licensed but is not:
Practical steps before serving any notice:
In most cases, the safest approach is to ensure your licensing is fully in order before any notice is served. If there is any doubt about your licensing position, seek professional advice before proceeding.
Before you serve an eviction notice, you should make sure your paperwork is the latest version and your file supports the legal grounds you plan to rely on. In practice, the exact documents depend on the terms of the tenancy (joint vs room-by-room) and why you are taking legal action, but a well-prepared HMO landlord file typically includes:
If you’re unsure what applies to your situation, use the government website (GOV.UK) and get advice before serving notice. In some cases (for example, licensing edge cases), a council may accept a temporary exemption, but getting this wrong can become a costly criminal offence and delay your next step toward a court order.
Evicting one occupier from an HMO - while others remain - is one of the most frequently misunderstood areas of landlord law. The answer depends almost entirely on how the tenancy is structured.
Step 1: Identify the tenancy type
If you are unsure which structure applies, check the tenancy agreements - and seek advice if the documentation is ambiguous. Courts will scrutinise the arrangements carefully.
Serving notice on an individual tenant (individual tenancy route):
With an individual tenancy in place, you can proceed using Section 8 grounds for the relevant occupier - for example, Ground 8 (rent arrears of three months or more), Ground 10 (some rent unpaid), Ground 11 (persistent delay in paying), or grounds relating to anti-social behaviour or breach of tenancy.
Key practical considerations:
Important: From 1 May 2026, rent arrears grounds under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 require three months' arrears (for monthly tenancies) at both the notice date and the court hearing for mandatory possession. Always verify the current threshold before serving.
Where you need to recover the whole property - whether due to a decision to sell, refurbish, or move in - the approach depends again on whether your tenants hold a joint or individual tenancy.
Joint tenancy route:
A single Section 8 notice served on the tenancy ends it for all occupiers simultaneously. This is, in theory, the more straightforward scenario - but it requires the notice to be served correctly on all parties, and all tenants must be named.
Multiple individual tenancies route:
You will need to serve a separate notice on each occupier, each citing the relevant grounds. Notice periods run independently, which means:
In practice, this is more complex than recovering a property with a single tenancy. Additional considerations:
In most cases involving multiple individual tenancies, it is worth taking advice before serving notices, given the coordination complexity and the risk of one flawed notice undermining the whole process.
From 1 May 2026, Section 8 is the only route to possession for assured tenancies in England. Section 21 no-fault evictions have been abolished under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. For HMO landlords, this makes getting Section 8 right more important than ever.
Commonly used grounds in HMO cases:
| Ground | Type | Trigger | Notice Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ground 8 - Rent arrears (mandatory) | Mandatory | 3+ months' arrears at notice AND hearing date | 4 weeks |
| Ground 10 - Some rent unpaid | Discretionary | Any rent unpaid at notice and hearing | 4 weeks |
| Ground 11 - Persistent late payment | Discretionary | Repeated late payment (even if currently up to date) | 4 weeks |
| Ground 14 - Anti-social behaviour | Discretionary | Nuisance, annoyance, or criminal activity | Immediate (no notice period) |
| Ground 12 - Breach of tenancy | Discretionary | Any breach other than rent arrears | 2 weeks |
HMO-specific considerations when serving Section 8:
Wales note: Wales operates under the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016. The notice procedures, forms, and grounds differ from England. If your HMO is in Wales, seek Wales-specific advice.
HMO cases are rarely “one-size-fits-all”. Before you start court proceedings, make sure your notice, evidence, and compliance pack are consistent with your tenancy structure and the legal grounds you rely on. For many property owner clients, the quickest route to protecting rental income is not rushing the notice - it’s serving the correct document set, correctly, the first time. If the allegation involves a serious offence or safeguarding risk (including where a family member is affected by tenant conduct), take advice immediately so your approach is proportionate and defensible.
HMO possession cases regularly throw up challenges that straightforward single-tenancy evictions do not. The most common:
Licensing disputes and delays. If your licensing position is challenged during possession proceedings, it can halt the case. Local authority enforcement action running in parallel with a possession claim creates complexity and reputational risk. Resolve licensing issues before initiating possession.
Evidence complexity with multiple occupiers. Maintaining separate rent schedules, communications logs, and evidence files for multiple tenants simultaneously is demanding. Disorganised or incomplete records are one of the most common reasons HMO possession cases are delayed or fail at court.
Anti-social behaviour in shared settings. ASB in HMOs often involves disputes between co-tenants rather than with the landlord directly. Establishing the evidential basis - incident dates, nature of behaviour, impact on others - requires careful, contemporaneous documentation. Courts expect a proper paper trail, not general complaints.
Managing communication and safeguarding risks. HMOs may house vulnerable tenants - students, those with mental health challenges, or those in financial difficulty. Courts are sensitive to vulnerability. Handling communications with care, and flagging safeguarding concerns early to relevant support services, both protects tenants and demonstrates that you have acted reasonably.
Partial occupation after notices. When some tenants leave and others do not, practical problems multiply: who is responsible for shared areas, bills, and upkeep? Your HMO management duties continue regardless. Seek advice before assuming the departure of some tenants simplifies your legal position.
HMO possession cases demand more from landlords than standard evictions - more documentation, more legal precision, and more careful management of multiple occupiers and compliance obligations. Getting it wrong means delays, costs, and the risk of having to start again.
Helpland is one of only two NRLA-recommended eviction specialists in England & Wales. With over 20 years of experience, fixed-fee services, and a dedicated account holder managing your case personally, we handle the full process - from licensing checks and notice drafting through to court representation and bailiff coordination.
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In most cases, it depends on your tenancy structure. If your occupiers share a joint tenancy, you typically cannot remove a single person without ending the tenancy for all - serving notice on one joint tenant usually ends the tenancy for everyone. If each occupier holds an individual tenancy for their room, you can serve notice on that person alone without affecting other residents. Check your tenancy agreements carefully before acting, and seek professional advice if the structure is unclear.
The core legal framework - Section 8 notice, possession order, warrant for possession - applies to HMOs in the same way as other tenancies. However, HMOs add significant compliance layers: licensing requirements, HMO management regulations, and property standards can all affect your legal position. An unlicensed HMO that requires a licence creates risk of invalid notices, civil penalties, and Rent Repayment Orders from tenants. In most cases, the complexity is higher and the margin for error lower than in a standard tenancy.
You do not need a licence specifically to evict, but if your property requires a licence and does not have one, you may be prevented from recovering possession lawfully. Courts and tribunals treat unlicensed HMOs seriously. Tenants can apply for a Rent Repayment Order reclaiming up to 12 months' rent, and local authorities can take enforcement action. In most cases, you should check your licensing position with your local council and resolve any gaps before serving any notice.
The process differs depending on your tenancy structure. With a joint tenancy, a single Section 8 notice served correctly on all occupiers initiates one possession process for the whole property. With multiple individual tenancies, you must serve separate notices on each occupier - notice periods run independently, possession dates may differ, and you may need to manage multiple court claims. Coordinating a full property recovery across several individual tenancies is complex; in most cases, professional support significantly reduces the risk of delays or errors.
Section 8 is now the only route to possession in England following the abolition of Section 21 in May 2026. For HMO cases, the standard Section 8 requirements apply - valid notice using the correct prescribed form, correct grounds cited, correct notice periods observed - plus HMO-specific considerations: your licensing must be in order, notices must correctly name each relevant tenant, and your evidence file (rent schedules, communications logs, incident records) must be organised and complete. For rent arrears, mandatory Ground 8 typically requires three months' arrears at both the notice date and the court hearing date under the Renters' Rights Act 2025.
This article provides general guidance for landlords in England & Wales only. It does not constitute legal advice. Laws and court procedures may change; always check current government guidance and seek professional advice for your specific circumstances. For Wales-specific guidance, refer to the Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016 framework.